tnimble":1vv1dk6j said:When taking too many through shavings the board will become convex indeed. This should not happen when taking only 1 or 2 through shavings.
tnimble":4ned1g6e said:Try it again on a edge of a board where you take full width shavings. This way you can verify if its your technique of overlapping the shavings of a set.
If it still happens, check the sole of the plane, espacially look at the ara close to the mouth. Use a good steel rule for this that is at least the length of the plane.
I don't know how much the bump at 4" from the beginning is. But this bump could be caused by either a flatness problem of the plane just behind the blade or can be caused by the plane offered to the wood with the toe slightly upward / heel slightly downward.
Also did the plane stop when making the stop shavings?
MarcW":2odt6ci0 said:Often the tail vise is a bit lower than the bench surface. This could cause the board to depress under the weight of the plane and to jump up to a bump later on.
If you do not clamp in the tail vise, maybe it's a depression in the surface of the workbench...
Try against a planing stop on another spot of the bench or on a piece of MDF. If the problem maintains it probably is the plane or the technique.
David's technique is foolproof unless you make work with a plane with an uneven sole. I guess I'd check the plane's sole again with a confirmed straightedge.
I bet on the plane.
tnimble":33zsnl5v said:The longer your reference surface is the faster you can flatten the sole of the plane.
However a perfect flat surface is not needed as long as that surface has no twist / wind.
When your not sure about the surface and you have a convex plane use two sheet of sand paper with about 1 to 2 third the length of the plane between them.
Then take a number of passes and remeasure the hollow in the sole of the plane. Make a guesstimate on how long you should continue this.
Remeasre the plane. If the hollow in the plane gets less but moves to the toe or the heal of the plane move presure or remove one of the sheets for a while.
adrian":2a2glkrk said:If I'm trying to remove a 0.0015" hollow, what grit paper would I want to start with?
This is more or less the setup.adrian":1otyy9bo said:Could you elaborate on this. The planes I've checked are concave, though I didn't check the side to side profile. (I no longer have the one that was greatly convex.) So if I have a 12" long reference and a 25" long plane I can use the reference to lap the plane? I didn't follow the description above with two sheets of sand paper.
If I'm trying to remove a 0.0015" hollow, what grit paper would I want to start with?
When the plane is flat (but you measure a hollow) you can take very fine shavings. When the plane is slightly convex you can still take the same fine shavings. However there are some differences.Another thing I wonder about is the tolerance of my references. I mean, I think the Starrett straight edge is flat to within 0.001", so if I observe an apparent concavity of 0.001" then perhaps it's really the straight edge that is wrong rather than the plane (?). I suppose if the goal is not to make the plane flat but to make it convex then this isn't such an issue, as long as I make it more convex than the tolerance of my reference.
adrian":232yx0i0 said:The key picture isn't showing up.
tnimble":17r32ce6 said:This is more or less the setup.adrian":17r32ce6 said:Could you elaborate on this. The planes I've checked are concave, though I didn't check the side to side profile. (I no longer have the one that was greatly convex.) So if I have a 12" long reference and a 25" long plane I can use the reference to lap the plane? I didn't follow the description above with two sheets of sand paper.
Use this only if the plane has a hollow!
Move the plane back and forth aover the two sheets. Due to the gap and the travel over it the middle of the sole is not sanded, the tips of the toe and heel have the most sanding.
bugbear":zqildlz9 said:adrian":zqildlz9 said:If I'm trying to remove a 0.0015" hollow, what grit paper would I want to start with?
I prefer seperating the metal removal process from the measurement process.
I have had success with scrapers, files, and abrasive (SiC and AlZi) on small blocks.
The nice thing is, you only need a reference as big as your plane, and the reference used under low loads, so doesn't need to be killer rigid.
(a 24" long sheet of glass has a LOT of flex)
More details here:
http://www.geocities.com/plybench/flatten.html
BugBear
tnimble":oxl64sdz said:...This is more or less the setup.
Use this only if the plane has a hollow!
...
Move the plane back and forth aover the two sheets. Due to the gap and the travel over it the middle of the sole is not sanded, the tips of the toe and heel have the most sanding.
...
adrian":61cym5op said:bugbear":61cym5op said:
I remember reading about this process in a set of materials by Jeff Gorman (which sadly seem to have vanished from the web).
I suppose I'd have to try this myself to get a feel for it. I also note that a flat reference the size of the plane is needed. (Are all sheets of glass guaranteed to be flat?)
But I guess another question is whether the goal is to be "flat" or to be convex. If concave is bad then specifically seeking convexity would be desirable because otherwise you're limited by the tolerances of your reference and you can't be sure that you're not actually still concave a bit. It's not clear how to use this procedure to make the sole convex.
bugbear":s61zdgfg said:This is how Lee Valley (used to?) specify their plane sole flatness; guaranteed flat within 3 thou, and never concave (so the tolerance was flat - 3 thou convex, NOT flat plus or minus 1 1/2 thou)
Rob Lee":s61zdgfg said:A slight correction to "concave sole" information - we make planes with flat soles, with our manufacturing tolerances only allowing concavity as a deviation from flat - as opposed a +- from flat. Then too, where you allow variance has the greatest bearing on quality. A concave variance in the sole 3" in front of the mouth will have no effect on performance - a variance at the edge of the mouth will...
Consider a corrugated sole plane - that has considerable concave variances...! Or - the back face of a japanese chisel...they still cut perfectly flat!
If the sole perimeter and a given locus around the mouth (fore and aft) is coplanar, than you'l get maximum performance. However - any amount of convexity (a bump) on sole WILL affect performance. We allow zero convexity - so what you get from us is flat to concave, and with good reason!
Enter your email address to join: