Ttrees
Iroko loco!
As said I've tried a multitude of differing ways to get the camber the way I like it.
David's suggestion of "directed pressure" i.e putting your fingers where you want metal removed, rather than leaning, works for me the best yet.
I've seen some pine you were recently planing Jacob.
From the shavings, it does appear that you weren't using a mad camber or had aggressively honed the corners away of the cutting iron,
so you can at least see what a fine camber looks like.
You are always willing to talk about sharpening,
so I find it strange that you would not have noticed it being in anyway tricky to do, not the sharpening part, but the geometry needed to get the cap even when set.
Terrible photos I know, but an example of what my jack plane is set to
when working on slightly tougher stock, never more than
that 1/32" away from the edge with my timber and cap iron @50.
It's not often I have to hone that iron with such a slight camber,
and possibly easier to achieve compared to having a bit more camber, because it needs to be even if it's to work nice for me.
Sorry I have no other photos of cap irons to show.
I'm not saying your talking gibberish, as I've seen others appear to get nice cambers with nearly all methods.
I just wonder what I would think of the geometry if it were me in person, wanting to plane something that wasn't a narrow edge.
Tom
David's suggestion of "directed pressure" i.e putting your fingers where you want metal removed, rather than leaning, works for me the best yet.
I've seen some pine you were recently planing Jacob.
From the shavings, it does appear that you weren't using a mad camber or had aggressively honed the corners away of the cutting iron,
so you can at least see what a fine camber looks like.
You are always willing to talk about sharpening,
so I find it strange that you would not have noticed it being in anyway tricky to do, not the sharpening part, but the geometry needed to get the cap even when set.
Terrible photos I know, but an example of what my jack plane is set to
when working on slightly tougher stock, never more than
that 1/32" away from the edge with my timber and cap iron @50.
It's not often I have to hone that iron with such a slight camber,
and possibly easier to achieve compared to having a bit more camber, because it needs to be even if it's to work nice for me.
Sorry I have no other photos of cap irons to show.
I'm not saying your talking gibberish, as I've seen others appear to get nice cambers with nearly all methods.
I just wonder what I would think of the geometry if it were me in person, wanting to plane something that wasn't a narrow edge.
Tom