No. If a piece was so rocky it wouldn't sit on a bench I 'd probably put it in the vice to flatten the back a bit. Shims doesn't sound a good idea to me at all.
Exactly, this or some other method might work, see Follansbee
But when it comes to a wide narrow panel, it needs be on the bench,
therefore knocking off the high spots, which might need doing twice or more on dry timber,
Not sure if you're using winding sticks at some stage around this...
and your bench light, unless you take off your headlamp or have a window at the end of your bench.
Using the bench throughout is much easier, i.e making sure no twist or bow is present therefore eliminating the material deflection one needs for thinner work, or work which has deflect under the plane.
He didn't. Why would he?
What, this upside down thing? Still means nothing to me.
Surely there's some articles regarding planing thin stock, although not sure who your referring to.
In the Charlesworth vid, he mentioned having a flat surface being essential or something along those lines for planing thinner drawer sides.
How very true. Unfortunately, this will not stop Jacob (and a few others) from telling you how very wrong your method is because it is not how they were taught.
@Ttrees, I attended the four courses taught by David Charlesworth in 2019 and 2020 and have all of his books and videos. I agree with everything you have written so far about the methods for determining flatness. In the image you included in Post #48 showing David checking the squareness of the edge, he is using the video crew's large lights as a backlight. In practice, with no video crew around, we used the large window at the end of his shop for the backlight.
I presume you got a much more thorough insight into things Mike,
I'd seen the Cosman video and Charlesworth's one afterwards and it was enough to make planing easy for me overnight.
I dont think this thread has came to handbags at dawn yet, nor doubt anyone minds a bit of bedtime reading
and meself and Jacob aren't too fragile about our views anyways.
True, but a lot of 'new' ways often turn out to be 'solutions' to things which were not problems in the first place.
Inevitably they get taken up very enthusiastically by beginners having the usual beginners' problems, which we all have had.
Like a worklamp beside your bench and actually using it.
Surely using your winding sticks would actually be doing the job of your combi square in real life,
I just reckon your just having a laugh.
Even that would be much easier than being in the dark and using your graphite combi square to mark high spots, which would be for no reason to do, if one had respect for the edges
which you would anyway if you're using winding sticks.
You won't see Charlesworth plane anything and hope he takes a shaving, there is emphasis on
knowing what you want to do, and not some attitude that the plane can simply find high spots
with a load of scrubbing.
If you've planed thinner stock before, then why would ones thinking change regarding
different dimensioned stuff which presents the same characteristics,
i.e thinner work, longer work and the work correctly supported.
Not that you wouldn't be addressing these things yourself, but often suggest advice otherwise on
the opinion which is generally a catch all answer which is never specific enough to be of much use to anyone.
All the best anyways
Tom