swagman":16o00ck3 said:
http://www.thisiscarpentry.com/2010/09/03/moisture-content-wood-movement/
Something lost over time has been sawing material pith on center. We see the end charts all the time, and we build knowing what will occur in terms of expansion, contraction and cupping, but without the pith sawn on center, then we can still have twist.
When I order plane wood, I always request every piece be dead quartered and pith sawn on center, and the mill that cuts and dries beech without fail delivers every single piece cut like that. It is fabulous to work with (but expensive).
I only wish I wasn't so cheap as to forgo that type of material when building something for in the house, but it costs double of regular market rates to be that picky.
I see this discussion has carried over elsewhere, but it is to me, an indication that people cannot use a smoother properly for anything other than the thinnest shavings, or they are using stock that should've been used for kindling.
Also, someone who is preparing wood hand dimensioned should be getting within smoother shavings with a try plane and have a finished surface quality or near it already before then. If the follow up to that several days later is as hard as its made out to be on that blog, something is drastically wrong.
I forgot one lesson that I learned long ago. Putting together a blanket chest, a friend and I were using very figured maple, and when we had it thicknessed, it was too wide for my planer so we took it to a shop that had a gigantic 52" three drum Beach sander that could remove material faster than my lunchbox planer. In almost an instant, our panels were sanded, and I wanted to use a scraper plane days later. It was agonizing, because those panels had moved, and I ended up card scraping them at the time. They didn't move much, but enough to make something that can't remove stock at any decent rate trouble to use, and we had 12 panels to deal with.
They would be a twaddle to finish plane now, and I wouldn't worry about it. For a part time woodworker, it's unrealistic to go to a shop and have that stock thicknessed and think you'll have a chest assembled quickly, and it's also unrealistic to think you'll finish plane them right away and never mar or mark any of them before finish and assembly. Of course, it would be a twaddle to thickness plane them now, too, but with the high angle planes I had back then, it was wrist breaking.