I started trying to edge joint 4 ft long boards. The wood is quartersawn American cherry. The last time I tried to do this I gave up and used an electric router with a guided bit. But armed with the methods described by Charlesworth in his dvd using a cambered blade and taking stop shavings, I tried again. And as is usual, things happen that I don't understand.
I started on the first board using a bevel up LV jointer with a cambered blade, and got reasonably close, but my straightedge would rock a bit, and I couldn't seem to get out that last bit of convexity. Mysterious.
Now the LV jointer had been in use for a while. I had used it when face jointing this same timber. I switched to a Clifton #7 that I thought had a fresh blade, also cambered. That seemed to work much better, and I breezed through several boards, using the LV jointer first and then switching to the clifton as I got close and taking stop shavings to remove convexity in length and shifting the plane left or right to correct problems in the width.
Now I worked on a board that had a knot in the middle of the edge, which may not have been the nicest thing for the edge, but as far as I could tell, the Clifton was still going stong, producing fine wispy shavings.
Then I started work on a board that just wants to stay convex. It has a big bump in it and the plane won't cut the bump away. Now my planes do not have perfectly flat soles, but they nevertheless worked OK on the first half-dozen pieces I jointed. I would take stop shavings and eventually the edge would reach a point where the straight edge wouldn't rock. And the crucial test: when I lay two of these pieces together the edges meet with no rocking or gap evident. But in this case, the plane refused to cut, even though the wood had a bump. What is going on? It's the same plane that was working before. I didn't adjust anything. I suppose there's the blade.
The plane was taking nice shavings, but I thought maybe I should sharpen. One oddity was that the plane was squeaking in a certain place on the wood. I inspected the blade and it looked, from the glint on the edge, like the edge had probably deteriorated in the center region where all the work was happening. I held the blade up to a straight edge.
Hmmm. That's funny. The blade seems to be hollow in the center. I have a lot of difficulty looking at blades against straight edges and drawing clear conclusions, but it appears that the blade is making two contact points with the straight edge. I'm pretty sure I didn't sharpen a hollow into the blade! Is this an expected pattern of wear, that I would remove the entire camber in use? The bevel angle was about 28 degrees. The camber was of the size Charlesworth recommends, as I recall, though it was a while back that I established it, and I'm not sure what the blade actually looked like when I started work. I tried to re-establish the camber, but I'm not sure I've succeeded, and in any case I have not recreated the earlier delightful situation where the process was working.
I took the blade out of the LV jointer and looked at it with a straight edge. It appears to be still cambered, though it's possible that the curve is too flat in the center. (Because this is a bevel up plane the camber is much larger.) This plane was working harder than the clifton, because I had it set for a thicker shaving, and I was using it on some rougher edges. Why didn't this plane work? (I suppose the sole could be at fault: maybe it's not flat in a way that's somehow more harmful.)
I started on the first board using a bevel up LV jointer with a cambered blade, and got reasonably close, but my straightedge would rock a bit, and I couldn't seem to get out that last bit of convexity. Mysterious.
Now the LV jointer had been in use for a while. I had used it when face jointing this same timber. I switched to a Clifton #7 that I thought had a fresh blade, also cambered. That seemed to work much better, and I breezed through several boards, using the LV jointer first and then switching to the clifton as I got close and taking stop shavings to remove convexity in length and shifting the plane left or right to correct problems in the width.
Now I worked on a board that had a knot in the middle of the edge, which may not have been the nicest thing for the edge, but as far as I could tell, the Clifton was still going stong, producing fine wispy shavings.
Then I started work on a board that just wants to stay convex. It has a big bump in it and the plane won't cut the bump away. Now my planes do not have perfectly flat soles, but they nevertheless worked OK on the first half-dozen pieces I jointed. I would take stop shavings and eventually the edge would reach a point where the straight edge wouldn't rock. And the crucial test: when I lay two of these pieces together the edges meet with no rocking or gap evident. But in this case, the plane refused to cut, even though the wood had a bump. What is going on? It's the same plane that was working before. I didn't adjust anything. I suppose there's the blade.
The plane was taking nice shavings, but I thought maybe I should sharpen. One oddity was that the plane was squeaking in a certain place on the wood. I inspected the blade and it looked, from the glint on the edge, like the edge had probably deteriorated in the center region where all the work was happening. I held the blade up to a straight edge.
Hmmm. That's funny. The blade seems to be hollow in the center. I have a lot of difficulty looking at blades against straight edges and drawing clear conclusions, but it appears that the blade is making two contact points with the straight edge. I'm pretty sure I didn't sharpen a hollow into the blade! Is this an expected pattern of wear, that I would remove the entire camber in use? The bevel angle was about 28 degrees. The camber was of the size Charlesworth recommends, as I recall, though it was a while back that I established it, and I'm not sure what the blade actually looked like when I started work. I tried to re-establish the camber, but I'm not sure I've succeeded, and in any case I have not recreated the earlier delightful situation where the process was working.
I took the blade out of the LV jointer and looked at it with a straight edge. It appears to be still cambered, though it's possible that the curve is too flat in the center. (Because this is a bevel up plane the camber is much larger.) This plane was working harder than the clifton, because I had it set for a thicker shaving, and I was using it on some rougher edges. Why didn't this plane work? (I suppose the sole could be at fault: maybe it's not flat in a way that's somehow more harmful.)