ColeyS1":y5buy6zz said:
I've got a Stanley 5 1/4. Back in the day I was trying to collect all the record and all the Stanleys. Must say it's a pretty little thing. Ideal for a kid learning the difference between smoother and jack
Coley
That's what probably drove the value and desire for the 5 1/4 for a while. 10 years ago, it wasn't uncommon for someone to say they were trying to set up type sets, and I'm sure there are people who are still doing that. I just haven't seen as much of it on the internet.
It's not uncommon around here to find estates with a lot of stanley planes. A coworker of mine had a grandfather who collected stanley planes, and he bought every single one he could find, even if it was work like it had been pulled on pavement or had broken parts or castings cut down.
He died with 1600 planes, and his relatives had a mess trying to sell his planes. At his estate auction, they had gotten to selling the oddballs for a quarter bid....and the stuff that was really bad never sold.
Point being, when you could put the common ones together here for a few dollars, a lot of retirees who weren't woodworkers were collecting planes, hammers, saws, oil cans (my father is a collector of these), whatever floated their boat. Before the internet, I'm sure there was more anticipation of what you might see or get at each sale or tool meet, but now it's at your fingertips and collecting all kinds of things is less interesting because you can't do the on-foot hunt like you used to.
(5 1/4 planes look to price like a 5 or 4 on ebay now. Fascination seems to have worn off on infills, too, which in the states was out of control for a while - $1000 for a common norris smoother in decent condition, and supernatural powers were attributed to them just because they became a fad).
If lie-nielsen has any issue (none of the above affects it), it's that there's too often more desire for their stuff than they have the capability to tool up for and meet.