adrian":1qeb9ipm said:
Wiley Horne":1qeb9ipm said:
Hi Adrian,
My experience is that if a plane 'just stops cutting'--meaning downward pressure won't hold it in the cut--then you're out of clearance angle.
This is very helpful to know. It explains why the bevel up and bevel down planes behave differently.
Here's a suggestion: Do you have a grinder? Or a belt sander? If so, get a fresh start on the bevel up blade by removing some metal. Take a square and mark the blade back about 1mm up from the current edge, and grind back to that line. That should get rid of any rounding or excessive wear on the blade back near the edge. Then, going forward, sharpen more frequently so that you are removing the wear and not allowing it to accumulate over sharpenings. And to control what your sharpening may be doing do to the blade back, use David Charlesworth's ruler trick (and no other stropping or microbevels) to limit the clearance loss to 1 degree.
I don't understand how this procedure would change anything. If I hone until a burr is raised and then work the back (with the ruler trick) until a burr is raised then haven't I removed any worn area?
Adrian,
I should have mentioned this before, but we are comparing a plane attacking at 45 degrees with one attacking at 59 degrees--the 59 degree plane is approaching a scraping angle, and will have a shorter blade life. Especially against a wood with 2200 Janka hardness, which is way harder than sugar maple. A better comparison would be to grind the BU blade to 33 degrees or so (as Larry Willliams suggested), so that both planes are attacking at 45 degrees.
However, let's set the comparison of planes aside and focus on the bevel up plane. Here's what may be happening….This analysis is based on your observation that the plane stops cutting prematurely; it stops cutting even though it is sharp enough that it should continue with enough applied force.
A couple preliminaries. The high angle, bevel up set up, in A2, creates a demanding sharpening situation. Compare sharpening the 30 degree primary angle BD blade with the 47 degree BU blade. The overall problem in sharpening the two blades is the same--to remove the lower wear bevel. But here the similarities end. When you work the bevel of a BU plane, you are trying to grind the lower wear bevel off the opposite face--the back of the blade. This is different than working the bevel of a BD plane, where you are removing the lower wear bevel from the same face you are working. Just because of blade geometry, it takes a lot more metal removal from the BU blade than the BD blade--I would say about twice as much--to achieve the same degree of lower wear bevel removal. The large included angle of 47 degrees accentuates this effect, compared to the 30 degree (primary angle) BD blade. Draw a scale picture of this, and you can see how the geometry makes a tougher problem of the high-angle BU blade.
Plus, A2 is a wear-resistant steel. It resists metal removal, even though you need to remove more metal from the BU blade.
So we're up against 3 things--an abrasive-resistant steel, a large included angle on the blade, and the fact that we are trying to remove a wear bevel on the opposite side of the blade. This latter fact means that you could roll up a burr, and still have wear bevel left untouched. What could be happening is that, even though you are generating a burr on the bevel side of the BU blade, it is not a large enough burr to have fully rolled up the wear bevel on the blade back. Then you flip the blade over and 'back off'--remove the primary burr with the ruler trick--but still there is some wear bevel down there just under the blade edge which is hiding from you. The blade is not quite sharp, still a bit ragged and rounded at the edge. So even after sharpening, it's halfway on the path to dull, and sure enough the lower wear bevel sets up more quickly than it should, and soon the plane can't be held in the cut. [In this situation, reasonable people can debate whether the lower wear bevel has grown to the point where clearance is limiting, or whether you just have a rounded dull edge which can't get a bite.]
Anyway, you can test this proposition by grinding back about a millimeter, to where you know you're into virgin metal and beyond any wear bevel. And sharpen that edge. See if you get a longer planing run. If you do, then the original problem was incomplete sharpening due to the factors discussed. If not, then either live with it or try a more acute blade angle.
Final thought: I have never planed canary wood, but it looks to me like 20 minutes of planing a Janka 2200 wood at a 59 degree attack is about what is possible.
Wiley