Mr_P":32fo74py said:
But....but......but.....infills are HEAVY! :shock:
Depends on the infill I guess.
No Bedrocks here as mentioned but a few others I've just weighed.
Record 03 = 23cm, 1.44kg
Record 04 = 24cm, 1.68
Record 04.5 = 26cm, 2.14
Spiers dovetailed open handled = 1.78kg
52.5 Iron, Sole length = 195mm
Scottish ish casting closed handle = 1.72kg
55 Iron, Sole length = 205mm
I wasn't having a pop at you, Mr P. I'm sorry if the tone of the post gave that impression - not the intention at all.
It does sometimes seem that some people present their opinions (which they're perfectly entitled to hold) as an Established Fact. It was to that I was reacting.
In the case of plane weights, some like 'em light. Some like 'em heavier, feeling that they power through the cut better. Some like horses for courses, and some don't mind as long as does what's needed. Some just use what they've got, neither knowing nor caring whether a lighter or heavier plane would be better or worse. Fortunately, we've got the choice - and not just with weight, but with bed angle, blade steel, adjuster type and many other things.
I entirely understand why a planing noob can end up confused - especially given the depth and intensity of discussion about the various options - but in the end, the simple rule that you get what you pay for (generally) is as good a guide as any. It's true that the budget end of the new plane market (including Stanley and Record, these days, sadly) is often junk out of the box, but even most of those can be made into a pretty fair plane with some fettling. It's also true that at the higher end, there may be 'features' that some people regard as unnecessary, but they'll all plane wood, which is the purpose of the exercise for most people. In the end, it's the user's willingness to spend some time at the bench learning about wood and how to plane it that will count for more than almost anything else.
Edit to add - Having done a bit of rummaging about the interwebs, I think to buy a metal-bodied plane of No 4 size new, you need to spend over £100 to be sure of one that'll work well out of the box (subject to sharpening the iron and fitting the cap-iron). That's a VERY rough giude. The lower the price below that, the more fettling you'll have to do to make a decent plane of it. Above that, they should work and work well, and it's a matter for the purchaser how much they're prepared to spend for extra features and build quality. That puts (in no particular order) Silverline, Anant, Faithfull, Record and standard Stanley below the line, and Stanley Sweetheart, WoodRiver, Quangsheng, Veritas, Lie-Nielsen and Clifton above it. I'm sure I'll have missed some, though!