Doug B
Shy Tot
I`m after a little advice on plane fettling, i have tried a search but it brings up hundreds of threads, so apologies if i`m covering old ground.
First of all, this is the plane in question.
It`s a Stanley 4 1/2, i was given it a few years ago by a retired friend who had got it from his father, so i`m guessing it`s quite old.
It had seen better days, but having seen DC`s No 5 recently at Cressington barns i decided to see if i could bring it back into good working order.
Whilst at CB i bought a Hock blade & chip breaker, as both were quite pitted even though i had previously tried to clean them up.
Full of encouragement from the show, i spent a couple of nights last week seeing what i could do. I first had a go at flattening the sole, this went well till it dawned on me that i remembered reading that the frog played a big part in the shape of the sole & although i had left it on i hadn`t checked how it fit.
My heart sank when i removed the frog for the first time, there was a hard lump of saw dust under the right hand side of the frog where it was supposed to mate with the body, once removed the frog rocked. I then spent a further night filing to try to get all surfaces to meet, i wasn`t enjoying my first fettling experience.
That was a couple of days ago & if i`m honest i wasn`t in a hurry to start again, but today i got a call from an engineering friend, i told him about my attempts & he said to bring it over, i doubt his receiver was cold by the time i got there. :lol: :lol:
After much merriment on his part at my efforts he put the frog & body in turn on his Bridgeport & this is the result of his machining.
All mating surfaces touch perfectly, so i`m once again inspired to carry on, this is how the sole is looking.
So what should i do next? i figure more work on the sole, but what grit do i work down to? Any advice would be most welcome.
First of all, this is the plane in question.
![CIMG4497.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/b4d/b4d024f5e8143a3488d2508527c461fa.jpg)
![CIMG4498.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/d21/d215de6f7899b0a57492e84c355ad78d.jpg)
It`s a Stanley 4 1/2, i was given it a few years ago by a retired friend who had got it from his father, so i`m guessing it`s quite old.
It had seen better days, but having seen DC`s No 5 recently at Cressington barns i decided to see if i could bring it back into good working order.
Whilst at CB i bought a Hock blade & chip breaker, as both were quite pitted even though i had previously tried to clean them up.
Full of encouragement from the show, i spent a couple of nights last week seeing what i could do. I first had a go at flattening the sole, this went well till it dawned on me that i remembered reading that the frog played a big part in the shape of the sole & although i had left it on i hadn`t checked how it fit.
My heart sank when i removed the frog for the first time, there was a hard lump of saw dust under the right hand side of the frog where it was supposed to mate with the body, once removed the frog rocked. I then spent a further night filing to try to get all surfaces to meet, i wasn`t enjoying my first fettling experience.
That was a couple of days ago & if i`m honest i wasn`t in a hurry to start again, but today i got a call from an engineering friend, i told him about my attempts & he said to bring it over, i doubt his receiver was cold by the time i got there. :lol: :lol:
After much merriment on his part at my efforts he put the frog & body in turn on his Bridgeport & this is the result of his machining.
![CIMG4499.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/3a0/3a052757835ce3b1d389c2b83f40f051.jpg)
All mating surfaces touch perfectly, so i`m once again inspired to carry on, this is how the sole is looking.
![CIMG4500.jpg](https://proxy.imagearchive.com/512/512b2178e6e2d9908c6d5910e1f2a31a.jpg)
So what should i do next? i figure more work on the sole, but what grit do i work down to? Any advice would be most welcome.