pe2dave
Established Member
No Jacob. No lines
You must have a degree of camber there too. It would be impossible to drive a sharp square corner of a blade, or a rounded corner of a blade, through a piece of wood without leaving a matching profile. With a cambered blade the corners don't cut at all and the shaving thins to nothing at the edges.No Jacob. No lines
Another techneque you can use with a flat blade is to tilt the blade in the plane very slightly so that one corner is proud, the other recesed. Then you can take passes overlapping the strokes so that the recessed side erase the tram line from the protruding side. This is of course for the final very fine cut finishing passes. This is a useful technique if you only have a single plane and need a non cambered blade for edge jointing.Just turn up (round) the corners of the blade. No track lines.
at 4'19"You must have a degree of camber there too. It would be impossible to drive a sharp square corner of a blade, or a rounded corner of a blade, through a piece of wood without leaving a matching profile. With a cambered blade the corners don't cut at all and the shaving thins to nothing at the edges.
Hear, all ye good people, hear what this brilliant and eloquent speaker has to say!It would help our understanding if people didn't refer to drawers as draws.
at 4'19"
Works for me. YMMV
Not really - see his video on 'making' a scrub plane? More than a bit different.Sellers' stuff is good. What he's doing is only a gnats away from making a camber. Much the same really
No I haven't I'll have a look.Not really - see his video on 'making' a scrub plane? More than a bit different.
5mm gap (when pushed to one side) seems very big to me. 2 or 3 in total would allow for any expansion and look much better IMHOAnother question if I may.....
On a pine drawer what should the gap be??
I worked on 2.5mm each side but now I'm thinking it's a bit gappy?
Cheers James
That's easy - have two benches. Or three. Whatever flat surface you have will automatically attract detritus, which needs to be moved to another flat surface every time you need said surface. You will spend more time moving carp than working wood. This is normal, and sensible, and everyone does it this way.How do you manage it to keep the work bench clear if tools?!
The worst thing for being misplaced is the drill chuck key.
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