Phil Pascoe
Established Member
In the mid '60s my father had labourers that worked 7 days a week to take home £10 - and for Cornwall, they were not badly paid.
CStanford":2un06gck said:Isn't Clifton now out of business?
Sgian Dubh":15mb2st8 said:He may not be too far out sploo. I don't recall precise figures, but I do remember my first week's wage packet as a trainee cabinetmaker/ joiner in the 70s contained about £7 after tax and National Insurance deductions. The cost of a plane is hazier, but in my mind, something like a brand new Record No 4 (with a stained beech handle [prior to plastic, anyway]) was in the region of £4- £5. Don't quote me on the plane cost - and that really quite large spread between £4 and £5 surely indicates how unreliable my memory might be on this occasion, ha, ha. Slainte.sploo":15mb2st8 said:Sellers has mentioned a number of times that (in the mid 60s as an apprentice) his Stanley No 4 cost him a weeks' wages. Could just be an anecdote/exaggeration of course (I don't have any data).
D_W":3uf7pvhs said:If stanley still made planes in volume these days, i doubt they'd cost more than about $150 at their quality level to be made in the US and provide good service. Maybe less. Lie nielsen's operation and LV's operations look clean and neat, but I doubt their output is remotely close per hour of labor (adjusted for CNC type stuff if necessary) to match what stanley would've been doing 100 years ago. No part of a stanley plane from 100 years ago is low quality, though the bloggers and such might make it out as if they were.
At any rate, I find the quangsheng, et al, to be a bit of a slap in the face price-wise given where they're made. That's separate from the discussion of the quality, I'm sure they make a workable plane, but the price that they're sold for makes no sense to me.
Graham Orm":zup5br2b said:D_W":zup5br2b said:If stanley still made planes in volume these days, i doubt they'd cost more than about $150 at their quality level to be made in the US and provide good service. Maybe less. Lie nielsen's operation and LV's operations look clean and neat, but I doubt their output is remotely close per hour of labor (adjusted for CNC type stuff if necessary) to match what stanley would've been doing 100 years ago. No part of a stanley plane from 100 years ago is low quality, though the bloggers and such might make it out as if they were.
At any rate, I find the quangsheng, et al, to be a bit of a slap in the face price-wise given where they're made. That's separate from the discussion of the quality, I'm sure they make a workable plane, but the price that they're sold for makes no sense to me.
I have a 1900 Stanley #7. The as well as being tissue thin, the casting on one side is visibly thinner than the other, I doubt if that would get past quality control anywhere these days. My #6 QS in comparison is like a Rolls Royce. The Stanley is a novelty for my shelf. It cuts.......OK, but it's way too far from flat to even attempt to sort it out.
custard":2m7nhez0 said:D_W":2m7nhez0 said:I'm sure you're right, and I think most folks would be worn out by selling to an uneducated clientele, which is what the premium makers have to do these days.
It's not like there's a great big supply of new apprentices jumping at the bit to buy a basic set of metal planes. But there's a huge array of middle-aged white collar workers who are looking for a hobby and who will pay for a plane that's ready to work as soon as they learn to sharpen.
Near as I can tell, Stanley's planes cost about half a day's labor in the early 1900s, maybe closer to a day for an apprentice. that could easily be done these days if there was any volume, minus the rosewood handles, maybe.
Some well considered points there.
Apprentices in the UK are only entitled to a nugatory wage. The legal minimum wage for anyone over 21 in this country is £6.70 an hour, £5.30 for anyone aged 18-20, £3.87 for anyone under 18, but only £3.30 an hour for apprentices aged under 18 or indeed apprentices of any age during their first year. That's barely enough to keep body and soul together. You can guess what the result has been, a rush to classify many jobs as "apprenticeships" and 12 month employment contracts for those aged over 18. This has led to the nonsensical situation where you can serve a year long apprenticeship as a coffee brewing barista or a shelf stacker in a supermarket.
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