Good Morning All,
if there is one tool which I continue to have difficulty in mastering, it is my Veritas skew rebate plane.
The two key adjustments seem to be that the blade must be parallel to the mouth and that the side of the blade must project just a whisker towards the vertical wall of the rebate. (Incidentally, the latter seems counter-intuitive as surely a projecting blade would undermine the wall, creating an inward slope. This is obviously not the case but I can’t for the life of me see why and I would have thought that the blade should be bang on flush with the side of the plane.)
I don’t use the plane until I believe I have made the above adjustments although the results would indicate that that belief is misplaced. The actual use of the plane is not a problem and I can usually achieve a horizontal floor to the rebate, this seeming to be a matter of acquiring the necessary muscle memory in terms of pressure on the fence with one hand and forward thrust with the other. The problem is that the rebate wall often slopes away from the main body of wood towards the rebate. This is of course correctable with a shoulder plane.
I am slowly getting better with the rebate plane but the slowness is frustrating. Therefore my question is: do I just stick with it and practice a lot with scraps of wood or do any of you have some killer advice which will enable me to get this sorted once and for all?
Thanks in advance,
Andy.
if there is one tool which I continue to have difficulty in mastering, it is my Veritas skew rebate plane.
The two key adjustments seem to be that the blade must be parallel to the mouth and that the side of the blade must project just a whisker towards the vertical wall of the rebate. (Incidentally, the latter seems counter-intuitive as surely a projecting blade would undermine the wall, creating an inward slope. This is obviously not the case but I can’t for the life of me see why and I would have thought that the blade should be bang on flush with the side of the plane.)
I don’t use the plane until I believe I have made the above adjustments although the results would indicate that that belief is misplaced. The actual use of the plane is not a problem and I can usually achieve a horizontal floor to the rebate, this seeming to be a matter of acquiring the necessary muscle memory in terms of pressure on the fence with one hand and forward thrust with the other. The problem is that the rebate wall often slopes away from the main body of wood towards the rebate. This is of course correctable with a shoulder plane.
I am slowly getting better with the rebate plane but the slowness is frustrating. Therefore my question is: do I just stick with it and practice a lot with scraps of wood or do any of you have some killer advice which will enable me to get this sorted once and for all?
Thanks in advance,
Andy.