Adam W.
A Major Clanger
It's not worth ignoring the past.
A chip breaker is not essential, look at all the old wooden mounding planes that work fairly well. That being said there are 3 things that make a plane work well assuming all the issues with sole flattening etc are good
So if you want to take large shavings in soft wood with the grain. A sharp blade wide moth and chip breaker set back is fine. Try that on wild grain and you will end up with a mess
- a sharp blade. If teh blade is sharp and you are planing with the blade it will work
- the mouth opening. This limits the size of shaving so when planing against the grain/wild grain the plane cant physically dig in as far
- the chip breaker. The tighter the chip breaker the shorter the shaving before it has to deflect
Moulders don't have a cap iron because firstly, there isn't enough room and secondly, they don't need them anyway as the position and shape of the wedge pinning down the iron and directing the shaving into the side escapement negates the need.Moulding planes do the finish work after most of the profile volume is done by other planes or saws, and on wood that's selected to be ideal. I suspect the reason they don't have a cap iron is because each is used too little to justify the cost of a cap iron, and because we can work around any issues by setting aside the most ideal wood for mouldings.
You can do dimensioning work without cap irons, but in anything other than perfect wood, it takes twice as long and getting a clear even surface is a lot harder.
I tried to do dimensioning with single iron planes first because Larry Williams said they were better but even fas cherry is too much for them. It was agonizing and I resolved to figure out the cap iron or just quit making anything other than menial stuff for the house (closet shelves, etc.).
like you I can't understand the idea of using water. The clue is in the name, oilstone.Interested , not worked up about it. It keeps coming up in threads though and there's something weirdly ritualistic about the modern sharpening cult, the gurus and their occult procedures!
e.g. just a detail - it seems odd to me that so many have been persuaded to use water as a sharpening medium, in spite of its well known association with rust, not to mention the messiness they all complain about. Smacks of self punishment. At least it's not actually acidic. You can of course buy an anti rust additive - which means having to persuade people that oil is really bad for everything!
Not to mention another faction who have been persuaded to buy honing fluids more expensive than good whiskey, or camellia oil more suited to coiffure!
Keeps me entertained anyway.
I took a clue from my stones too. They are water-stones.like you I can't understand the idea of using water. The clue is in the name, oilstone.
I've used water stones for nearly forty years. I find them much less messy than oil, and haven't see a single speck of rust in that time. I'd rather get water on my wood than oil.like you I can't understand the idea of using water. The clue is in the name, oilstone.
Well it did ring a bell!Ha, ha. You must have missed, or forgotten, discussion of chatoyance in Cut & Dried at section 7.9.
Very wise!As to planes and the correct setting and preparation of their cap iron, aka chip breaker, if they have one, I prefer to remain an inactive observer in this thread. For that matter, I like to be no more than an observer of all plane sharpening, setting, and their use threads. Slainte.
I've looked at lots of DTs in old work and can say that every DT in every drawer I've ever seen has been cut tails first and in pair together. It's immediately obvious when you dismantle them and put them together -. the DTs on opposite sides match exactly and must have been cut together. You can usually tell without dismantling, just by looking at the outside of a drawer.Paul Sellers has produced a lot of good videos and generally seems to make genuine and good recommendations. The problem is however that he has a way of dismissing everything that is done differently like he does. For instance he writes that: "In the overall scheme of things I might reason that in over 97% of cases, woodworkers cut the tails first and make the pins follow. So in this case, the tails predetermine that pins follow the tail in like fashion that form always follows function in the real world of non-fantasy craftwork."
This is obviously nonsense, for instance the 1934 classic "Hantverktets bok - Snickeri" a big beautiful reference book used by students at vocational schools studying to become cabinet makers states that dovetails are cut pins first. And the people writing that book were a lot more skilled furniture makers than Sellers.
Another thing is his convoluted and complicated way of making spoons which require a lot of tools to produce clumsy, impractical and rather ugly spoons.
Oh well nobody is perfect!Another thing is his convoluted and complicated way of making spoons which require a lot of tools to produce clumsy, impractical and rather ugly spoons.
Snip/
What "Hantverktets bok - Snickeri" says is just another opinion. People get things wrong, proof readers miss things, then people follow them obediently and it becomes the norm.
Trade practice is often very different from notionally "correct" ways of doing things as found in books. In magazines it gets worse and they are 50% misinformation (amongst 75% advertising for things nobody needs!)Oh well nobody is perfect!
/snip
In Sweden the tradition among cabinet makers was to cut pins first. The book I am refering to was written from the point of view of trade practice.What "Hantverktets bok - Snickeri" says is just another opinion. People get things wrong, proof readers miss things, then people follow them obediently and it becomes the norm.
Trade practice is often very different from notionally "correct" ways of doing things as found in books. In magazines it gets worse and they are 50% misinformation (amongst 75% advertising for things nobody needs!)
Like Sellers, probably not.Have you not even considered for one moment that joiners in other countries or regions of the world might do things differently to the English ?
Of course they may do.Have you not even considered for one moment that joiners in other countries or regions of the world might do things differently to the English ?
Should Sellers have embarked on a worldwide survey of DT practice and added appropriate footnotes?Like Sellers, probably not.
I'd check it out -I'd be interested to see a few trad Swedish made drawers, but they don't come my way that often!The book I am refering to was written from the point of view of trade practice.
Interesting. So the brits do it slightly more efficiently! I'd check a few more example before coming to a conclusion though.Checks Danish made draws....clearly pins first, as the tails don't match.
Enter your email address to join: