bugbear":1i5ix5s0 said:
MIGNAL":1i5ix5s0 said:
I use a small deadblow hammer, brass face at one end, plastic the other. About a 1 inch diameter face. The plastic is fine for hitting the wood, The brass does mark when hitting the iron but it can always be re-polished. they can be had on the auction site for just north of a tenner. Best hammer I've had for adjusting wooden planes.
Yes - a nice small THOR soft face mallet is my adjuster of choice. About the right weight for adjustrment, no mushrooming.
http://www.thorhammer.com/Hammers/Plastic/
50p at a car boot, if you're patient.
I'm sure we've all seen (and filed away!) the results of adjustment using steel faced hammers.
BugBear
It's certainly true that many a vintage plane iron suffers from a surfeit of mushrooms, but I can't see how that could happen from adjusting alone - to advance an iron needs only a gentle tap, after all. My suspicion - unconfirmed - is that many an iron has been removed from the plane in the past by driving it down and out through the mouth. That would cause a bit more damage.
Edit - maybe not. I've just tried it. On a wide-mouthed plane, you can get the iron and cap-iron through, but not the cap-iron nut. On a narrower-mouthed plane, only the iron will come through (obvious when you think about it - or try it!).
Still don't think all that damage to the top-end of plane irons is down to normal adjusting, though. Must be something else going on...