Garyk85":4vo9m6co said:
Hello
Im new to woodworking and the forum. I'm sure this will have been asked numerous times, but i can't find any other threads on it.
How do the more experienced users plane and square timber? The internet keeps telling me to use a surface planer and a thicknesser. But i can't find any suitable surface planers. Are their alternatives? Am i looking in the wrong place?
Thanks in advance
Hi, I'm interested to know why you "...can't find any suitable surface planers...".
I think you need to be clearer on what your needs are (and therefore to clarify what "suitable" means for you). For example, by giving more thought to:
- Number and size of pieces (are you planning on making doors/windows/furniture/boxes?);
- Type of wood (clear-grained stuff like pine or tulip poplar, hardwood like maple/oak, wild-grained stuff like elm);
- What trade-offs are you willing/able to make between muscle power (all is possible by hand- it's how the old boys did it) and machinery (money/space/time/effort)?
I use one of these, which is a pretty generic design (similar ones can be had from Record Power etc. etc.):
https://www.angliatoolcentre.co.uk/meta ... d1076.html It's on wheels, which is very handy.
If I've got long timbers to work on, I wait for a dry day and work outside - using roller stands like this:
https://www.axminster.co.uk/axminster-f ... s-ax825905
or one of these (or one of its longer/shorter sisters):
https://www.workshopheaven.com/quangshe ... plane.html
Whether working by hand or by machine, I follow broadly the same process:
a) Plane one face flat (and use this subsequently as the 'reference' face) - this may require shims underneath to support a cupped/twisted board and stop it flexing while being planed;
b) Plane one edge square to that reference face (and use this subsequently as my 'reference' edge (on a machine this is done using the flat reference face held against the fence);
c) Plane the reverse face flat and parallel to the reference face (by referencing off the 'reference' face);
d) Plane the reverse edge flat and parallel to the reference edge (by referencing off the 'reference' edge)
There are loads of YT videos (many of which show scary lack regard to machine safety) showing how to do it - don't forget that US folk refer to a 'planer' as a 'jointer'.
Cheers, W2S
PS
Peter Parfitt doing it with a machine:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Eh-jo11lsMs
Paul Sellers doing it by hand:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cl5Srx-Ru_U