Steve Voigt
New member
CStanford":1fbf9s5q said:This is even more asinine than the fellow who ruined his DMT flattening his SiC stone. Unfortunately Steve, you're showing how poorly read you really are -- all of this and more is either in the nine editions of Planecraft published from the 1930s to 1980s or in one of Charles Hayward's many books, Wells & Hooper, Joyce, Joyce as revised and expanded by Alan Peters, Wearing, et al. I'm not sure how you've determined that these techniques were (or were not) 'commonly taught and practiced' and where these deficiencies actually occurred but these are not the techniques memorialized in the better 20th century woodworking handbooks, all of which should be in your library but apparently are not.
It's as if you are asserting that all of these books were written, most in at least two, three or more editions, and they never sold a copy and nobody ever used them, and they referred to technique nobody would recognize.
Jacob":1fbf9s5q said:Dear me you had some dreadful teachers! I must have been lucky I claim no credit.
Charlie,
Note that I said "taught and practiced." In fairness, I probably should have said taught or practiced. I made no mention of reputable writers like Hayward, who I've already cited in this thread. Of the 6 points I listed, the first three can be confirmed by looking at old stones and tools, and Jacob has regularly used this as evidence for his point of view, which you've repeatedly supported. Point 4 has been discussed ad nauseum on forums and I'm not going to repeat that. The last two points can be found in plenty of sources. I stand by what I wrote.
And with that, I think I'll take my leave. On every other forum I've ever been on, the moderators moderated. They were neutral and restrained; they never belittled or bullied or berated the participants, or called them "asinine" or "absurd." It's a nice tag team Jacob and you have going, sort of a good cop/ bad cop thing, but it sure poisons the whole atmosphere. I appreciate that I had a chance to make my point; now I'll leave it up to others to decide for themselves. Besides, I have planes to make.