I have a couple of wooden planes which have lain unused in a box in my garage for a long time, a coffin smoother with a 2” iron and a fore plane with a 2 ¼” iron. No idea of vintage but both belonged to my dad so probably cheap examples from the 1930s pre-war era. The planes themselves have no makers mark but the marking on both irons has in large letters TIP followed by what looks like the British Standard kitemark.
Below that is a rusted makers name.
? Crookes& Co
Sheffield
Searching on-line it appears that the initial I can’t make out is H for H. Crookes &Co.
However I can’t find anything about the TIP mark.
I was just wondering if the knowledgeable folk on here can tell me how this mark relates to the quality of the iron?
The coffin smoother seems in a restorable condition. No splits in the wood and only light rust with no pitting near the cutting edge on a very thick iron (compared to my metal planes).
However the larger plane has a split in the body at the top notch which holds the wedge in position.
Would this make the plane just fit for scrap or has anyone successfully fixed such a fault?
Thanks
Jim