At risk of duplicating the question in another recent thread, I ask the question. How sharp does an edge need to be and how can you tell when it's not sharp enough? And do different woods behave differently in terms of how sharp the edge needs to be?
I surfaced about 40 square feet of rough sawn American cherry with my hand planes. I'm not sure how often I sharpened tools, but I went several hours (ten? fifteen?) between sharpenings without noticing a problem. (Maybe I'm oblivious.)
Lately I have been working in canarywood. It is surfaced already, but badly, and is not flat. I was working with two planes, a bevel down plane (45 degree cut angle) and a bevel up plane. The bevel down is sharpened at 30 degrees with a 32 deg microbevel and set for a thicker shaving (maybe .004 inch). The bevel up plane is sharpened at 45 deg (microbevel at 47), effective pitch 59 and set a thin shaving (about .001 inch). Both planes are Veritas witih A2 irons. Both blades are cambered.
At a certain point the bevel up plane just stopped taking a shaving. It wouldn't cut. I usually blame this sort of event on the shape of the wood. But at a certain point I decided I needed another explanation, so I inspected the blade. It had an accumulation of fine dust from the wood on the edge. When I stroked the edge with a fingernail it felt smooth. It would bit into the face of my fingernail reasonably well at an acute angle, though not quite as well as when the plane was freshly sharp. But I wouldn't have considered it dull. I sharpened the edge and went back to work and the plane would cut again. For 20 minutes or so. Then it again stopped cutting completely.
Meanwhile, I can't even remember the last time I sharpened the bevel down plane. After I finish surface jointing a board I figure it must need some attention. I remove its blade and inspect the edge. It's clearly in far worse condition than the other blade. The fingernail stroked along the edge reveals a lot of roughness. I can see some micronicks with the naked eye. It flunks the test for biting into the fingernail. This is clearly a dull blade. But this blade was still cutting when I took it out of the plane. This plane is sharpened at 30 degrees with a microbevel of about 32.
When working with the cherry I sometimes suspected that my finish surface was suffering due to the blades getting dull, but I don't recall noticing this phenomenon even though I went far, far, longer without sharpening.
Presumably my sharpening procedure isn't to blame, since it's the same for both blades. So what explains this difference in behavior?
I surfaced about 40 square feet of rough sawn American cherry with my hand planes. I'm not sure how often I sharpened tools, but I went several hours (ten? fifteen?) between sharpenings without noticing a problem. (Maybe I'm oblivious.)
Lately I have been working in canarywood. It is surfaced already, but badly, and is not flat. I was working with two planes, a bevel down plane (45 degree cut angle) and a bevel up plane. The bevel down is sharpened at 30 degrees with a 32 deg microbevel and set for a thicker shaving (maybe .004 inch). The bevel up plane is sharpened at 45 deg (microbevel at 47), effective pitch 59 and set a thin shaving (about .001 inch). Both planes are Veritas witih A2 irons. Both blades are cambered.
At a certain point the bevel up plane just stopped taking a shaving. It wouldn't cut. I usually blame this sort of event on the shape of the wood. But at a certain point I decided I needed another explanation, so I inspected the blade. It had an accumulation of fine dust from the wood on the edge. When I stroked the edge with a fingernail it felt smooth. It would bit into the face of my fingernail reasonably well at an acute angle, though not quite as well as when the plane was freshly sharp. But I wouldn't have considered it dull. I sharpened the edge and went back to work and the plane would cut again. For 20 minutes or so. Then it again stopped cutting completely.
Meanwhile, I can't even remember the last time I sharpened the bevel down plane. After I finish surface jointing a board I figure it must need some attention. I remove its blade and inspect the edge. It's clearly in far worse condition than the other blade. The fingernail stroked along the edge reveals a lot of roughness. I can see some micronicks with the naked eye. It flunks the test for biting into the fingernail. This is clearly a dull blade. But this blade was still cutting when I took it out of the plane. This plane is sharpened at 30 degrees with a microbevel of about 32.
When working with the cherry I sometimes suspected that my finish surface was suffering due to the blades getting dull, but I don't recall noticing this phenomenon even though I went far, far, longer without sharpening.
Presumably my sharpening procedure isn't to blame, since it's the same for both blades. So what explains this difference in behavior?