Petey83":yod7swhf said:
Just wondering if people have any recent thoughts on the best way to camber 25, 38 and 50 degree Veritas BU Irons. I have seen one very comprehensive guide but this seems dependent on having a linisher / fixed belt sander (I don').
I have a slight camber on 1 of my 25 degree irons but it took an absolute eternity on the 300 grit diamond plate to get it.
My thinking is to grind the camber on the bench grinders with iron parallel to the wheel and then regrind the primary bevel after getting the camber.
Do you mean perpendicular to the wheel? that is how I grind irons like that, including irons when I make a jack and send it to someone (I don't leave it flat). Color your corners if need be, or just take some flat facets off the iron and then once you've got them even, round them off, then put the iron on the rest and grid at the bevel angle until the blunt edge is gone. From that point on, you should be able to maintain the camber honing, and hollow grind as needed.
I had a BU plane, but I hate the way they operate in a deep cut with a cambered iron. The iron has to protrude so far out of the mouth they just have a bad feel. I'd suggest tracking down a record 5 or something if you want to do camber work, you'll like it a lot more, and you guys seem to have planes like that aplenty.
There is no virtue in that kind of work to having a dead flat plane (actually, the premium planes have more friction) or having a really hard iron, as hardness buys you time before clearance decreases - but that critical clearance is only quick to dull softer irons with the thinnest of shavings. Those softer irons are preferable for coarse and medium work.