engineer one
Established Member
my brain hurts #-o ](*,)
like so many things that have been around for years,
like windowcills on windows. practice in the 60' and 70's was to
remove them, which is why so many of those buildings
have rain stains under every window. :lol: :twisted:
i think one of the major reasons that electric p/t's have adjustable tables
is that the wood has a tendency to lift as it goes over the blades that
rotate. it is i think one of the reasons for snipe,
one of the reasons people like me find hand held electric planes
difficult to use(thank goodness), and every room door i have done
electrically recently has a hollow at one end or the other.
even with a good push block, and downward pressure where ever you can,
the wood passing either over or under the cutter heads are going to
tend to lift or dip because of the way in which the cutter block
rotates. i wonder whether spiral blades work any better than straight???
however, with a hand plane, the cutting motion involves weight transfer
but basically a constant downward pressure on the cutting area. pushing down the front at the beginning, or the tail at the end, does not change the weight in the middle too much, thus having made the initial cut,
with the weight on the front tote.
then in the middle of the cut, the weight is equally centred about the
blade, then at the end, to stop the plane tilting over the edge, you push down on the rear.
so you flatten the wood in front before the cut starts, then as you cut,
because of weight transfer the front tilts up in a miniscule way, and
the tail rides on the piece behind which has been flattened, so automatically
the plane adjusts itself without the need for moveable platens, since there
is really no rotating grab like on a p/t.
when you start on a rough piece of timber, you are going to initially get uneven shavings i think, and so far have experienced, then as it gets
flatter, and you are happier with the grain pattern, the shavings should
if we have sharpened properly become longer, albiet thinner.
so from an engineering point of view (sorry alf i slipped back into the thought process ) once you have started to produce thin shavings,
i reckon the minute angle of attack in front of the blade where the sole
rests on the uncut wood gives you the same thing as the adjustable out feed table on the electric jobbies.
sorry if the is only 2 pence worth feels like it is so much waffle that it ought to be worth more :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
like these long ones where we seem to go from knowledge to theory
back to personal experience, to ??????????????
paul :wink:
like so many things that have been around for years,
like windowcills on windows. practice in the 60' and 70's was to
remove them, which is why so many of those buildings
have rain stains under every window. :lol: :twisted:
i think one of the major reasons that electric p/t's have adjustable tables
is that the wood has a tendency to lift as it goes over the blades that
rotate. it is i think one of the reasons for snipe,
one of the reasons people like me find hand held electric planes
difficult to use(thank goodness), and every room door i have done
electrically recently has a hollow at one end or the other.
even with a good push block, and downward pressure where ever you can,
the wood passing either over or under the cutter heads are going to
tend to lift or dip because of the way in which the cutter block
rotates. i wonder whether spiral blades work any better than straight???
however, with a hand plane, the cutting motion involves weight transfer
but basically a constant downward pressure on the cutting area. pushing down the front at the beginning, or the tail at the end, does not change the weight in the middle too much, thus having made the initial cut,
with the weight on the front tote.
then in the middle of the cut, the weight is equally centred about the
blade, then at the end, to stop the plane tilting over the edge, you push down on the rear.
so you flatten the wood in front before the cut starts, then as you cut,
because of weight transfer the front tilts up in a miniscule way, and
the tail rides on the piece behind which has been flattened, so automatically
the plane adjusts itself without the need for moveable platens, since there
is really no rotating grab like on a p/t.
when you start on a rough piece of timber, you are going to initially get uneven shavings i think, and so far have experienced, then as it gets
flatter, and you are happier with the grain pattern, the shavings should
if we have sharpened properly become longer, albiet thinner.
so from an engineering point of view (sorry alf i slipped back into the thought process ) once you have started to produce thin shavings,
i reckon the minute angle of attack in front of the blade where the sole
rests on the uncut wood gives you the same thing as the adjustable out feed table on the electric jobbies.
sorry if the is only 2 pence worth feels like it is so much waffle that it ought to be worth more :lol: :lol: :lol: :lol:
like these long ones where we seem to go from knowledge to theory
back to personal experience, to ??????????????
paul :wink: