Tasky":2032i1zl said:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i1r1LIk ... 8zn4pszI9A
So yeah, he suggests that for the 2-300 years before Stanley gave it an official name, it was an 'upcycled' smoothing plane.
Interesting to note that he goes from Scrub to Jack to Smoothing, without even mentioning a Fore plane...?
Kind of curious that we don't see these planes sold used, because I've bought planes as old as about 1830 unused (as in, they should be out there in droves).
Wouldn't be surprised if there were users with more than one jack, though.
Just supposing what a very very coarse plane might have been used for before the era of architectural restoration, etc, I wouldn't be surprised to find that a shop kept a very rank set plane to rough green wood - but I'm no expert on any of that stuff.
I just have a fairly good idea about what a lazy man who hand dimensions would want at his bench using decent dried lumber. those planes *are* found in droves, and the fact that few hand dimension makes them really cheap on your island continent. I saw a good shape jack plane on ebay a couple of days ago BIN with a full iron and no breaks for 10 quid. I also bought an almost unused Mathieson jack (17 inch, 2 1/8th iron - my favorite design) for the equivalent of about $35. Saw several 22 inch try planes in decent shape for 20 pounds, too.
There's no great need to wonder which is better for what - trying them is a cheap proposition in most places. A lot cheaper than trying carving tools or shoulder planes. One can even try single iron planes if they like (if you can find them - that's not quite so easy), to see the difference between single and double and why the double eliminated quality single iron planes so fast.
I get about one request a month to build someone a plane. I have done it once so far (because the person buying agreed to contribute the difference between my ask and my costs to a charity - for a plane I'd already made for myself and used) - it's odd to me that I can tell someone to buy one of these $20 planes, and they won't do it. If I tell them I'll make them a ready-use plane for a couple of hundred, they're onto that. Perhaps I should offer a white collar service here in the states - U buy, I fettle - for old wooden planes. $100 for an hour or two's worth of work (perhaps making a wedge or something of the sort), it goes to charity, and I don't need to build myself planes.
And nobody pays $400 for a wooden plane that sits on a shelf until it shrinks tight to the iron.