Tasky":scquorr6 said:
stoopiduk":scquorr6 said:
I'm holding the plane at 45º, but pushing it in line with the grain. That does take a shaving and more often than when having the plane straight on.
That's because you've effectively made the plane shorter, so it gets into the hollows.
Try planing so that the plane travels at 30 degrees or so to the grain direction (note, one way will probably be easier than the other, so plane that way!). Take a slightly thicker shaving. Keep the plane level to where you want the surface to end up, though that's easier said than done. At first you'll just skim off spots, but each time you'll skim off a larger piece until eventually you get a shaving all the way across.
The reason for doing this is so you can take a thicker shaving (but don't go mad!). Thus you get the high spots down quicker. Once the surface is roughly level, go back to planing with the grain (planing in the easy direction!). To begin with you'll just hit the high spots, but they won't be very high now, so you'll soon get full shavings.
I'm just thinning down some guitar sides, and need to go from about 11mm to 2mm which is a lot of wood to remove (but less effort and safer than hand ripping the board). I start with a heavily cambered blade (really, really heavy camber, maybe 5 inch radius) at 30 degrees, then a more shallow cambered blade at 30 degrees, then the same plane with the grain, and finally a smoothing plane with very little camber. The workpiece is 800mm x 90 mm, takes about 10 mins planing doing it this way.
I believe you only have one plane so you will go slower, but give it a try.