@D_W
Nearly sounds like that setting the depth of the plane is also more forgiving with a rounded, or smaller "2paint by numbers" bevel?
Cheers
Tom
Absolutely. I didn't put that plainly enough - the rounded cap will work with a much greater range of shavings. It's really uncommon to have a plane with a cap set for smoothing and have to do anything between sharpening's, but it might not be so easy to say that. I think the cap use is somewhat misunderstood. More typical use for smoothing is a relatively coarse set of shavings (think 3-4 thousandths in cherry) where the cap is engaged, and then back off of the depth for a very thin set of shavings and make a couple of overlapping passes. If the shaving is 1 1/2 thousandths and the cap is set at 8 (I only know a figure like that 8 thousandths because someone pushed me to look at where the cap actually is under a microscope), then the final shavings aren't using the cap and don't need to. It's shavings thicker than those not strong enough to lift that benefit.
if a cap is set with a rounded shape about twice as far away as the thickest shaving anticipated (no measuring is needed, this is just a comment since I later looked at it), then it will go from nothing to more than half of that and work fine. If it's set at 8 thousandths with an 80 degree flat front, then it seems to go from nothing to bulldozer right away.
I guess if following the video's principles, if I'd use a rounded cap at 8 thousndths (or a hundredth or whatever) on a smoother, the video suggests you could blunt a big wall and set the cap further back. There'd be a whole range of shavings above fine smoother shavings that would tear out before the shaving was thick enough to be compressed by the cap iron and fibers prevented from lifting.
(50 or 60 by the way, also does allow for a wider range of shavings, as does keeping the facet on the smaller side. If using a single facet, if it's tiny, it won't work. if it's too big, it'll limit cheating shaving thickness a little higher in a pinch. It's got to be in the middle somewhere, so I'd creep up on it being effective rather than just making it big and trying to correct it later).
Stanley's design is so wonderful because you can pretty much just take the stock cap iron if it's well made and "trace" the front rounding and it'll get steepened a little at the terminus. It'd be a shame to try to hone a flat facet on it.
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