Phil Pascoe
Established Member
I suspect it was another **** gag.
It did occur to me, but I was being unusually mature :wink:phil.p":33cvz49e said:I suspect it was another **** gag.
phil.p":1jrbm12s said:I suspect it was another **** gag.
I am not entirely sure these sort of planes were cheap. Its easy to think that now they are littering many car boot going for between £1-10 a piece, but several old boys I have spoken with say they cost not much less than a Lie Nielsen does today (relative) at the time they were being sold new.G S Haydon":2898npy7 said:Strangely I wish Axminster, Stanley etc literally just made a good Bailey, 1960's style would be fine. Ductile iron is fine but if it adds to much to the cost don't worry about it, perhaps a solid yoke and a fabricated lateral adjustment lever rather than the pressed. Beyond that it was truly proven design.
Rhyolith":twtpvmxl said:The debate of what is the "best" plane make went on for ages at the wooden boatbuilding yard I used to be in. There was someone with at least one of every kind of plane imaginable too so real comparisons could be made...................................................................................................................................................................................................................................To sum up, if your on a budget, get a second hand plane. If you have a generous amount of cash to spend on your planes get a Lie Nielsen.
Thats my Opinion.
Rhyolith":313spm6r said:I am not entirely sure these sort of planes were cheap. Its easy to think that now they are littering many car boot going for between £1-10 a piece, but several old boys I have spoken with say they cost not much less than a Lie Nielsen does today (relative) at the time they were being sold new.G S Haydon":313spm6r said:Strangely I wish Axminster, Stanley etc literally just made a good Bailey, 1960's style would be fine. Ductile iron is fine but if it adds to much to the cost don't worry about it, perhaps a solid yoke and a fabricated lateral adjustment lever rather than the pressed. Beyond that it was truly proven design.
In sort can a good plane be made cheaply? (genuine question)
Thats useful, thanksPaddy Roxburgh":325hwhdn said:Rhyolith":325hwhdn said:I am not entirely sure these sort of planes were cheap. Its easy to think that now they are littering many car boot going for between £1-10 a piece, but several old boys I have spoken with say they cost not much less than a Lie Nielsen does today (relative) at the time they were being sold new.G S Haydon":325hwhdn said:Strangely I wish Axminster, Stanley etc literally just made a good Bailey, 1960's style would be fine. Ductile iron is fine but if it adds to much to the cost don't worry about it, perhaps a solid yoke and a fabricated lateral adjustment lever rather than the pressed. Beyond that it was truly proven design.
In sort can a good plane be made cheaply? (genuine question)
I asked a similar question in this thread comparison-of-tool-prices-over-time-t91056.html. Conclusion if I remember rightly was that very roughly old stanleys and records cost about the same as Quangshengs or woodrivers do today (in comparison to earnings).
condeesteso":1bryhpey said:One solid cast body incorporating the iron bed, 50 pitch.
CStanford":2eomvkz8 said:"I remember reading all of the supposed fixes to Stanley planes in the primus range, but buying one quickly showed why I could get an unused primus plane for 1/3rd the cost of new."
If anybody has a Primus plane in good shape (or unused) that they want to sell at 1/3rd of retail I'm a buyer for every one I can lay my hands on.
Can I just check, are you talking about if you have to reshape the edge or create a new bevel because of a chip?custard":24nf7oqa said:Grinding stuff like that by hand, even with an ultra coarse grit diamond stone, is just a marathon dispiriting slog that will take at least 30 minutes of constant hard work
D_W":tlgx7bfw said:I can't imagine that anything made in the last hundred years is a functional improvement over the bailey design for anyone other than the possible exception of beginners. 45 degrees makes for a better plane in the full range of coarse to fine planing tasks.
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