pompon44
Established Member
Hi,
I've got an old Stanley #5 (one without the screw at the back of the frog to move it) that I tried to tune-up. So I started with the frog, as the blade had a tendency to chatter (even on fir...). So here I go with my coarse DMT for the top of the frog, and flat it becomes. Then I took a file and tried to flatten and smooth the back seating of the frog. Then I sharpened the underside of the tip of the chipbreaker, polished the top of the tip of the chipbreaker, and... reassembled the plane.
And well, the blade won't go out anymore !
I'm afraid I've overdone the filling of the back seating and so the frog angle is no longer 45°. This is for the moment the only cause of the problem I can imagine. Any other ideas ? And if this is it, is the tool ruined ? or could I try to file the bottom front of the frog to recover it ?
A tune-up-challenged beginner,
Regards,
I've got an old Stanley #5 (one without the screw at the back of the frog to move it) that I tried to tune-up. So I started with the frog, as the blade had a tendency to chatter (even on fir...). So here I go with my coarse DMT for the top of the frog, and flat it becomes. Then I took a file and tried to flatten and smooth the back seating of the frog. Then I sharpened the underside of the tip of the chipbreaker, polished the top of the tip of the chipbreaker, and... reassembled the plane.
And well, the blade won't go out anymore !
I'm afraid I've overdone the filling of the back seating and so the frog angle is no longer 45°. This is for the moment the only cause of the problem I can imagine. Any other ideas ? And if this is it, is the tool ruined ? or could I try to file the bottom front of the frog to recover it ?
A tune-up-challenged beginner,
Regards,