since we are promoting and showing how we save woodies, i thought i might show some of mine.
as you can see i have some modern ones, the now defunct dutch brand nooitgedabt, plus at least 5 older ones
the two jacks are branded.
one is stamped roberts, but i have also found a marples imprint on it, as well as the decal. it has a warranted cast sheffield steel blade, which is actually tapered out toward the cutting edge. sadly the detail is not too clear, it carries a chip breaker. it says it is 21/4
the other one is stamped mathiesons and also carries the mark
campbell brand it too has a warranted cast sheffield blade which is tapered out to the cutting edge, and has a chip breaker. unfortunately the wedge is worse for wear and may need a new one making.
the coffin smoothers do not have any manufacturing marks on them that i can see yet, the blades certainly do not carry marks. the larger one has a chip breaker, the smaller one not.
the angled rebate plane is an emir brand 1 1/4 wide
the hand driven grinding wheel machine is one my dad used to sharpen his stone chisels both in the workshop and on site in the cemeteries.
it is as you can see a mole brand, i assume it is the same company that makes mole grips, but cannot find any details so far. sadly the machine is somewhat seized, but sometime soon will try to dismantle it and see whether i can make it work again.
you do wonder why the jacks do not have any front handles??
as you can see the dutch stuff was still a relatively traditional shape.
[/url]
[/img]
now i must find the extra time to fettle and work with them. seems at least one of the jacks could make a decent scrub plane. but does that require a slightly curved base?
paul :wink: