Hello,
Today I received a very old Stanley #3 plane in the post - it's aparently from the late 20s. While I haven't tested it yet on wood, it seems to have all its parts and everything that should move, does so, pretty smoothly. It was covered with a lot of paint including the sole. I planed the sole on 100 git sandpaper on a flat surface and it came up well. No cracks and very flat except for a bit of a rise near the toe. I decided to sand the sides as well and when I did I exposed a diagonal hairline crack. This one here:
It looks like it runs almost to the end of the abraded region and perhaps beyond. Do I need to worry about this? If so, what technique/treatment should I seek for the old thing?
What a pain. Received quite a few other tools today too, fortunately all in good nick.
Thanks
Today I received a very old Stanley #3 plane in the post - it's aparently from the late 20s. While I haven't tested it yet on wood, it seems to have all its parts and everything that should move, does so, pretty smoothly. It was covered with a lot of paint including the sole. I planed the sole on 100 git sandpaper on a flat surface and it came up well. No cracks and very flat except for a bit of a rise near the toe. I decided to sand the sides as well and when I did I exposed a diagonal hairline crack. This one here:
It looks like it runs almost to the end of the abraded region and perhaps beyond. Do I need to worry about this? If so, what technique/treatment should I seek for the old thing?
What a pain. Received quite a few other tools today too, fortunately all in good nick.
Thanks