gwr":2vmel66o said:
Why are old pre ww2 Stanley planes regarded as much better than the latest offerings?
Some of it
is down to the finesse of the planes themselves, and part of it is looks, but a lot of it is hand-me-down opinion from people who prefer their looks and then couldn't separate that from how they worked... and to be less charitable, some would not have known how to get the most from a metal bench plane so they were actually no judge at all of good/better/best.
gwr":2vmel66o said:
Is it the materials that get used now or the finish of them that make the difference or both ?
People often say the material quality is part of it and there might be some truth in that sometimes, but it's very hard to notice any difference in quality of the cast iron in the frog or body castings between a $500 antique and a £25 modern plane. I think it's 99% about the machining and/or the quality of the original patterns myself. The original patterns were a little more refined and became bulkier and cruder over time, until you get to the modern ones which are visibly crude and ugly, and then not particularly well machined on top of that.
As far as the all-important cutting edges go, the irons on old planes
might be better than some produced later (70s Stanley irons made in England are said to be the worst going, super soft). But your bog standard Chinese iron from today's maker is at least as hard as many a good antique Stanley iron. And the modern ones can be substantially thicker, which if the plane weren't cheap as chips and look a little crude would be being sung as a plus point, as it is for a Hock or Clifton iron.
gwr":2vmel66o said:
I realise the new planes would be of little use straight out the box but after a little or lot of flattening what makes people say these planes are not so good?
You might be surprised how little fettling is required, especially given how often the You Must Fettle For Good Performance thing gets repeated. I'm not saying fettling isn't required, but a lot of it gets done without the person actually checking first if it's actually needed. Flattening soles is the number one culprit here.
With the cheaper modern stuff, like any product of a certain price level you might be unlucky and get a Monday-morning special but equally there are perfectly presentable examples out there and happy users of same. I have a no-name block plane that looks like it came straight from the same factory that produces Faithfull's offerings and it required virtually nothing other than honing the iron to work well. In fact it did take shavings with no fettling at all, just there was a little burr on the mouth that needed to be addressed and a few other rough spots. I also have two modern no. 4s that both worked quite well or very well essentially straight from the box.
Now that said, I'd much prefer to give a good older plane a new home.
Even if it was covered head to toe with rust once cleaned up and fettled (as needed, it might require very little if it was a user in its day) you'd likely end up with a better, probably lighter plane that cost you practically nothing but a little time and elbow grease to get ready. And it would win in the looks department IMO, but that's obviously a very personal thing.