I've been trying to flatten rough boards 4 ft long and 5-8 in wide. And I think think things could be going faster and better. My original technique for this was to deliberately make the board concave along its length by taking cross-grain shavings and then to try to fix it by taking shavings of increasing length along the grain at the ends. I was trying to refine my technique by using the stop shaving method presented in the Charlesworth DVD.
But I still seem to find some strange things going on. And I wonder if the stop shaving technique actually works on a board 4 ft long with a #7 plane. I have a board on the bench now with a recalcitrant bump in the center that I can't seem to remove. The straight edges say it's there but the planes don't want to touch it if I take shavings along the length of the board. I tried marking a plane length region around the bump and taking stop shavings and the plane basically won't cut even though there's a bump there.
And then there's the matter of twist. These boards seem to be twisted by about .05 inches along their length. What procedure is best for removing the twist. In the Charlesworth DVD he says to take stop shavings up to the low points. This didn't seem to work very well. And indeed, I notice that he says in his book that for "very long stuff" a different approach is required. I'm not sure what the threshold for very long is, but it doesn't appear that the different aproach is explained in the book. (I don't have time to search the DVD just at the moment, but I don't remember an approach for longer timber being given there either.) I've been planing diagonally from high spot to high spot, but this seems to upset flatness in all the other directions.
Is there any reference you would suggest that covers the task of flattening a board in great detail starting from rough? (I just read Christopher Schwarz book on Workbenches where he more or less says to just plane it this way and that way and it'll be flat. That's not what happens to me.)
But I still seem to find some strange things going on. And I wonder if the stop shaving technique actually works on a board 4 ft long with a #7 plane. I have a board on the bench now with a recalcitrant bump in the center that I can't seem to remove. The straight edges say it's there but the planes don't want to touch it if I take shavings along the length of the board. I tried marking a plane length region around the bump and taking stop shavings and the plane basically won't cut even though there's a bump there.
And then there's the matter of twist. These boards seem to be twisted by about .05 inches along their length. What procedure is best for removing the twist. In the Charlesworth DVD he says to take stop shavings up to the low points. This didn't seem to work very well. And indeed, I notice that he says in his book that for "very long stuff" a different approach is required. I'm not sure what the threshold for very long is, but it doesn't appear that the different aproach is explained in the book. (I don't have time to search the DVD just at the moment, but I don't remember an approach for longer timber being given there either.) I've been planing diagonally from high spot to high spot, but this seems to upset flatness in all the other directions.
Is there any reference you would suggest that covers the task of flattening a board in great detail starting from rough? (I just read Christopher Schwarz book on Workbenches where he more or less says to just plane it this way and that way and it'll be flat. That's not what happens to me.)