Ttrees
Iroko loco!
Hello folks
I've been pondering this for some time and the subject has never came up so here it goes ... bare with me
I've read that a lot of luthiers advise not to grind end cutters /fret cutters totally flat / flush
and to keep a tiny back bevel on them, as the edge lasts considerably longer .
Could this principal be the same for a plane iron ?
It got me thinking about another thread (at least I think it was in another thread ???)
About the apparently unclear motive for the scrub plane ...
I stand to be corrected on my memory of the following ! ....
but I remember a suggestion that it was possibly for the average Joe Bloggs
and possibly intended for hogging off material off a swollen door for example ,no need for a double iron atall ....
This doesn't sit well for me ,but I'm sure the person had more rational than that, of which I'm forgetting .
I presume there would be loooads of scrubs around if this was the case !
In my mind if you were Joe Bloggs back then (apologies if there's actually some dude with the same name :roll: )
You'd have the fantastic double iron in your possession and it would do it all ,and you'd not need another plane .
I'm not gonna go looking yet on the quest for the first scrub plane that Stanley ever produced, but I'm gonna take a pot shot
and guess it was after the bailey double iron design .
The bailey design came after the premium bedrock series ...right ?
Ole Leonard was no fool .. we know he was one for not wasting money or resources, with his thin irons ...
I presume it would have been very expensive to make another design, that of which a ....no.3 (?) could do ...
well, maybe with an extra iron ..
Also I seem to remember reading, he was one for giving the everyday craftsperson value for money too .
It seems to me, he got the feeling that the back bevel held an edge for longer and this is partly the reason for the plane design.
So has anyone suspected that the back bevel edge lasts longer ?
Has anyone noticed any signs of this, with those single iron woodies ? ...did single iron plane making continue after the new technology
of the double iron ?
Thanks for reading folks ,and hope yer all keepin warm, makin those beautiful shavings
T
Ding ding (hammer)
I've been pondering this for some time and the subject has never came up so here it goes ... bare with me
I've read that a lot of luthiers advise not to grind end cutters /fret cutters totally flat / flush
and to keep a tiny back bevel on them, as the edge lasts considerably longer .
Could this principal be the same for a plane iron ?
It got me thinking about another thread (at least I think it was in another thread ???)
About the apparently unclear motive for the scrub plane ...
I stand to be corrected on my memory of the following ! ....
but I remember a suggestion that it was possibly for the average Joe Bloggs
and possibly intended for hogging off material off a swollen door for example ,no need for a double iron atall ....
This doesn't sit well for me ,but I'm sure the person had more rational than that, of which I'm forgetting .
I presume there would be loooads of scrubs around if this was the case !
In my mind if you were Joe Bloggs back then (apologies if there's actually some dude with the same name :roll: )
You'd have the fantastic double iron in your possession and it would do it all ,and you'd not need another plane .
I'm not gonna go looking yet on the quest for the first scrub plane that Stanley ever produced, but I'm gonna take a pot shot
and guess it was after the bailey double iron design .
The bailey design came after the premium bedrock series ...right ?
Ole Leonard was no fool .. we know he was one for not wasting money or resources, with his thin irons ...
I presume it would have been very expensive to make another design, that of which a ....no.3 (?) could do ...
well, maybe with an extra iron ..
Also I seem to remember reading, he was one for giving the everyday craftsperson value for money too .
It seems to me, he got the feeling that the back bevel held an edge for longer and this is partly the reason for the plane design.
So has anyone suspected that the back bevel edge lasts longer ?
Has anyone noticed any signs of this, with those single iron woodies ? ...did single iron plane making continue after the new technology
of the double iron ?
Thanks for reading folks ,and hope yer all keepin warm, makin those beautiful shavings
T
Ding ding (hammer)