Whos doing it? At the minute i can't afford a thicknesser. I understand the principles of dimensionsing by hand and have done it a couple of times but wondered who else does it? Its a romantic view of woodworking but i always found myself chasing my tail with it
I was dimensioning by hand because my workshop is in my apartment. Now I learn how to use P/T because I got a room in the basement to rent.
On one hand, it sometimes surprises me how fast I can get it flat and with square sides.
On the other hand, if I have to do it that 16 times it kind of stops to be fun for me...
Even though it feels like it goes fast by hand, in the end it takes several weekends to dimension all parts.
It does feel like a fitness though, which I actually like as my daily work is with computers.
And with that you need a good technique and rithm to do it for prolonged times, like with other sports.
I like video tutorials from The English Woodworker, he is very efficient at dimensioning, which is the key.
I can see with my eyes high spots, and can feel with my hand grain direction.
And I use my workbench to test for flatness (no winding sticks required).
I have Veritas scrub plane for coarse removal, then I switch to #5-1/2 with heavy camber to smooth a bit and finish with my beloved #7.
I also shoot long grain using my workbench, which is much easer than feeling 90 degree when planning edge (which I still cannot really do).
Here is dimensioning of 100x100 mm spruse, 1500 mm long, four of them:
And end result is just perfect, without any visible gap whatsoever:
These I then glued together and got 190x190 mm, this was part of cat's tree then.
And I had to repeat it 4 times, 16 parts... In the end I cheated and used small P/T to plane the oposite sides for other 3.
This took more than two month, as it was summer time and I wanted to devote at least half of each weekend to my two children...
So, there is simply too little time and too many projects that I wish I could finish.
One of them is a bed for my daughter and it has to be finished before she goes to school.
Then three foldable doors, a dinning table, a facet cabinet, a wardrobe for another daughter and a writing table for my son.
With that much pressure I need all help I can get, otherwise it would be better to sell all tools and for so much money just order them to be made.
I have now a big heavy 16" P/T, 10" and 20" bandsaws and a mortiser. A track saw and a bisquit joiner, and I'm getting domino soon.
Don't have circular miter saw anymore, I use Nobex miter saw instead, I just don't like the noise and dust it produces.
And a shooting plane with a shooting board to square the ends.
I like the fact that I first learned how to do it by hand before jumping to machines though.