Good evening,
I am now hand planing boards of maple for my new workbench top. The total width of the workbench will be 600 mm. My original idea was to use two 250 mm boards and have a 100 mm well with a recessed board in the middle. But the maple boards were so twisted that I had to rip them in the middle and I will glue them after the dimensioning.
Currently, I have 4 boards that are approximately 1,9m long and 130 mm wide. They are all cupped, bowed, and severely twisted. The original thickness of the first board was 55 mm and after removing the twist and bow, I barely got 40 mm at the thinnest point.
My hand planing procedure is as follows:
1. place the board bow side up and use shims if it rocks on the workbench.
2. I find the highest point lengthwise and start planing there. If there is a cup I plane the middle of the board first and do not touch the edges. I always plane along the length and I do not do any cross or 45° planing. With a correctly set cap iron, there is almost no tear-out.
3. I remove all the cup so that the board is flat across the width and winding sticks will not rock. If the board is concave I just remove the bow in the center and simultaneously check for twist with the winding sticks.
4. Many YouTubers when demonstrating their way of planing will put winding sticks on both ends, mark the high spots, and plane diagonally from one high corner to the opposite high corner. I do it a little bit differently. If my board is 2 meters long, I divide the board into 5 or 6 segments. And I place winding sticks at each of those segments so I can see the twist along the board. If 4 segments are in the same plane and the last 2 get progressively in wind, I just plane the last two segments at the high side until they get into the same plane as the rest of the board. There is no need to plane full length from one high corner to the opposite high corner.
This process is not linear, so I do many of those things simultaneously (so as not to lose too much material) and I often check my progress with a straightedge and winding sticks.
there is one thing that I have noticed and I have seen no one talking about it. I did not even seen a concept of it. I will call it proximity planing. Sometimes when I want to plane a certain spot, I cannot get there, because the geometry of the plane, its length and the geometry of the board will not allow me to take a shaving there (it is a low spot - a valley around the hills). Then I start planing area that is adjacent to that place and that is higher . Gradually I can lower the surrounding area so that the spot I would like to plane becomes accessible. This way I am moving high spots where I want them to be and finally I remove them all so that the whole board is flat and level.
Does anyone have a concept how to do this (moving high spots and removing them) in the most efficient way with losing the least amount of material? I can do it in practice (my way - there are surely better ways), but it is rather difficult to explain with words.
Thank you.
I am now hand planing boards of maple for my new workbench top. The total width of the workbench will be 600 mm. My original idea was to use two 250 mm boards and have a 100 mm well with a recessed board in the middle. But the maple boards were so twisted that I had to rip them in the middle and I will glue them after the dimensioning.
Currently, I have 4 boards that are approximately 1,9m long and 130 mm wide. They are all cupped, bowed, and severely twisted. The original thickness of the first board was 55 mm and after removing the twist and bow, I barely got 40 mm at the thinnest point.
My hand planing procedure is as follows:
1. place the board bow side up and use shims if it rocks on the workbench.
2. I find the highest point lengthwise and start planing there. If there is a cup I plane the middle of the board first and do not touch the edges. I always plane along the length and I do not do any cross or 45° planing. With a correctly set cap iron, there is almost no tear-out.
3. I remove all the cup so that the board is flat across the width and winding sticks will not rock. If the board is concave I just remove the bow in the center and simultaneously check for twist with the winding sticks.
4. Many YouTubers when demonstrating their way of planing will put winding sticks on both ends, mark the high spots, and plane diagonally from one high corner to the opposite high corner. I do it a little bit differently. If my board is 2 meters long, I divide the board into 5 or 6 segments. And I place winding sticks at each of those segments so I can see the twist along the board. If 4 segments are in the same plane and the last 2 get progressively in wind, I just plane the last two segments at the high side until they get into the same plane as the rest of the board. There is no need to plane full length from one high corner to the opposite high corner.
This process is not linear, so I do many of those things simultaneously (so as not to lose too much material) and I often check my progress with a straightedge and winding sticks.
there is one thing that I have noticed and I have seen no one talking about it. I did not even seen a concept of it. I will call it proximity planing. Sometimes when I want to plane a certain spot, I cannot get there, because the geometry of the plane, its length and the geometry of the board will not allow me to take a shaving there (it is a low spot - a valley around the hills). Then I start planing area that is adjacent to that place and that is higher . Gradually I can lower the surrounding area so that the spot I would like to plane becomes accessible. This way I am moving high spots where I want them to be and finally I remove them all so that the whole board is flat and level.
Does anyone have a concept how to do this (moving high spots and removing them) in the most efficient way with losing the least amount of material? I can do it in practice (my way - there are surely better ways), but it is rather difficult to explain with words.
Thank you.