Adam W.
A Major Clanger
It was your comment about typos that I was referring to Jacob.
The title of this thread is very misleading because Paul Sellers did not say cap iron position does not matter.
He said, "a 1/32 of an inch to an 1/8 of an inch, anywhere in between it'll work fine"
So it doesn’t matter if it is any value at all between 1/32 and an 1/8th. As apposed to many that say much less than 1/32 or much more than ⅛...The title of this thread is very misleading because Paul Sellers did not say cap iron position does not matter.
He said, "a 1/32 of an inch to an 1/8 of an inch, anywhere in between it'll work fine"
He didn't say that though.So it doesn’t matter if it is any value at all between 1/32 and an 1/8th. As apposed to many that say much less than 1/32 or much more than ⅛...
Exactly.I hesitate to step into this whirlpool of opinion and belief, but here goes...
Paul Sellers is aimed squarely at the zero-to-minimum skilled people. His objective is to get people working with wood.
In that context, for someone just picking up a plane, setting the damned cap somewhere 1/32 and 1/8th from the edge is fine.
Some of you guys remind me of martial arts gurus who dismiss the very idea of self defence courses because you can't train a black belt of whatever-fu in 2 days. Which is of course perfectly true and totally missing the point.
Likely, it is perfectly true that setting a cap iron whatever thous of an inch is best for this job or that job, and yet also completely irrelevant for Paul Sellers audience.
Doing rebates by hand I'd be inclined to start a rebate with the 78 as it scores the line according to the fence, but then to carry on with a skew rebate plane once the rebate is well started. They were very heavily used which is why there are so many of them still about. Also a pleasure to use. Moving fillister is a bit over fussy for production work.
The narrow and thin blade of a rebate pane doesn't really need a 25º grind - just go straight for 30º - slightly convex bevel is normal. Best to leave as much metal in place for stiffness as they easily snatch - if worked really hard you can hear a zip noise as they chatter and leave little marks. First time I saw the zip marks on old work I thought it was some sort of machine roller impression, later realised it was hard worked rebate plane chattering.
PS knot prob - use the 78, try freshly sharpened blade, finer set, candle wax sole of plane. Try zero depth of cut and bring it up very gently to take thin shavings.
PPS Always mark up first (though the 78 does it's own marking) - then whichever plane you use - once the rebate is started it's much easier to proceed without the fence or the nicker. If it wanders off the mark just clean up with the plane on its side instead. The skew of a skew rebate tends to keep it up to the mark.
Another PS when I said doesn't really need a 25º grind - just go straight for 30º I meant doesn't need grind at all, on a power grinder at least. Blades too thin and get damaged IMHOAll makes sense - I'll try adjusting the grind for the #78 and my #10 and setting an even finer depth next time I come up against swirling grain in a rebate I'm cutting with the 78. Maybe steepen the final angle on my edge as well. 25 grind is due to the fact I have my bench grinder set up at this point and it seems to work well as a starting point for most edges I want, so it only gets altered for really low angles for a couple of chisels I have set up at 20 ish for end grain pairing only in soft stuff.
Actually straight rebate woodies are scarce - they are nearly all skew and right handed.Get a straight set wooden rebate plane and go both ways over the spot. If it's a rebate for glazing, I'm not fussed about a bit of tearout, as it gets filled by glass and putty.
Seeings as I am friendly with the conservation department at the council, I get away with single glazing and use old crown and cylinder glass, so it's putty and paint for me.
No carry on if it keeps you happy!True, but they do come up on ebay now and then.
A fine set skew will work too, but it's not as good and you have to keep a bit of sideways pressure on it and only good for cleanup.
Addendum.
After 5 minutes of looking, here's one.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/174705513095?hash=item28ad429287:g:xxgAAOSwlPRgXKqI
Plane the base flat and off you go.
And another....
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/402809297176?hash=item5dc94e1918:g:bdAAAOSw1rJgJn63
And another...
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/384106708893?hash=item596e8b3f9d:g:JFMAAOSw0xdgfxpr
Shall I stop?
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/124626228013?hash=item1d044d532d:g:DLcAAOSwlq1gSiKr
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