Ok here’s a little project that may be of interest to someone. I want to make a new clutch of planemaker’s floats. I want some for skewed mortises, such as rabbet planes and frankly most moulding planes. I am not aware that any modern moulding plane makers use skewed wedges in their planes, whereas almost all vintage planes have this feature - it’s a key part of their design.
Anyway, starting with a piece of 1”x1/4”x36” O1 ground flat stock, blue up with machinists blue….
This then gets marked up and cut on the horizontal milling machine. In 3 passes actually, 2 @ 0.1” then a final pass at 0.075“. Done in 3 passes so the mill doesn’t complain too much, also I don’t need to worry about getting stuck, so I can use the table auto-feed and get on with something else.
Result is 6 float blade shaped pieces of O1. Very accurately cut and ready for skewing and teeth. Arguably I could have cut the skew angle in, but I’m going to mill it at the next stage.
Anyway, starting with a piece of 1”x1/4”x36” O1 ground flat stock, blue up with machinists blue….
This then gets marked up and cut on the horizontal milling machine. In 3 passes actually, 2 @ 0.1” then a final pass at 0.075“. Done in 3 passes so the mill doesn’t complain too much, also I don’t need to worry about getting stuck, so I can use the table auto-feed and get on with something else.
Result is 6 float blade shaped pieces of O1. Very accurately cut and ready for skewing and teeth. Arguably I could have cut the skew angle in, but I’m going to mill it at the next stage.