MattRoberts":2q1dyu0h said:
I really hope that anyone who is relatively new to woodworking / blacksmithing / making doesn't read some of the comments in here. It would be a shame for their enthusiasm to be suppressed by fear of being mocked through elitist comments...
I hope that people don't confuse enthusiasm for throwing together junk for wasting an iron. But, the point of the "collab" isn't to make a good plane. It's to draw in subscribers, and I'm sure it will do that.
When I started woodworking, I was on the side of "some people think things need to be too perfect".
And then I had the same "enthusiasm" that you're talking about until George Wilson (politely) lined me out on something I'd made, and my entire perspective changed. I'd made a small pile (maybe not that small) of tools before that point, and while I had some fun doing it, it was like wandering through a dark room intentionally not turning the light on. None of them turned out to be worthwhile (Well, one did, but it could've been a lot better), just as the plane that was made in this video is destined to be wall art. With a little bit of up front planning (perhaps 5 or 10 hours) it could've been different, but who likes to think that hard? (I do, but most people don't).
To the extent someone wants to make art, that's fine - this plane served its purpose - it's intended to draw in subscribers without actually being burdened by knowing what you're doing or making something good or useful. The plane does look cool (I think). To the 99% of viewers who will never actually learn to make a decent plane or even use one, they can watch this and imagine that they could do the same thing, and such a trip of ignorance (the roy underhill effect is what I'd call it, I'll define below) is quite pleasant when it's not weighed down with reality. Much the same way millions of people tuned in to watch Norm Abrams (who is a masterful woodworker in terms of the type of work he did), imagining that they could do what he did in the time frame he did it because it looked easy.
A forum like this with knowledgeable participants is not going to have the same pie in the sky ignorant giddiness that a multi tens of thousands of views youtube video will have in the comment section. Most of us probably won't go there to suggest what could've been done to make a useful plane, because nobody there is going to care. It's on to the next video and the next collab so as not to lose the short attention span of the viewers who are more interested in a fast presentation of a topic, and move on to the next, please, before we talk about any details.
(Definition of the Roy Underhill Effect - that is, to draw in viewers who aren't making what you're making on your show, and never will, but present what you're doing in a way that convinces them that they could, anyway. It's enjoyable for the watcher because it's interesting and they're not burdened by the reality of the details. Roy shows someone how to carve with Mary May in 22 minutes, talks about a couple of aspects and nobody is threatened with the personal time investment that is involved in learning to do something well. That's what makes for an effective TV show - the pool of people who would like an entire season devoted to making a bureau - so that they actually have the information to try it - is not large enough to sustain anything.)