pam niedermayer":2v0xzws7 said:
Have you ever used a Japanese plane?
I do not own any Japanese planes myself. In fact I am only just starting to master jointing and thicknessing boards with hand planes. Way back, 20 years or so when I was teached into wood and metalworking I was told hand tools are slow and inaccurate and should not be used. "Look at any old house, they build them with hand tools, everything is off level and crooked". And why would one investigate in good technique if when gluing up a table top, one can joint the edges of a few boards, glue them up in the hydraulic press and then run the entire table top through the 40" thicknesser. Why would we want to taper the legs by hand when we simply can recall the taper program on the CNC mill?
I now do own a lot of handtools and starting master most of them very well. I've no access any more to the machines I used to rely on and quickly learned that with 'hobby' power tools things aren't that easy and you miss out on much.
Currently I stick to to hat I'm familiar with myself: Stanley planes. I have done quite a few restorations backed with the knowledge of metalworking and engineering and instruction what one want to be done to a plane . Now I also know how to use them myself.
shoji are room divers / screens, right?
Love that show (thanks for mentioning the show, I just found out they've put another season online!
). I very much enjoyed the episodes on the barley twist table and the historic machines. Just watched the episode with John Reed Fox again and indeed he has a very special plane made for him that features a spring to push down the toothpicks he planes with it. This plane also has a special guidance thingy and sled very impressive tool. Besides John Reed Fox his plane I've seen other and more simple planes having springs embeded in the sole. Planes without all the guide things and the sled.
This is such a specialized plane that it wouldn't be what most people mention in a general conversation about Japanese planes.
Iv'e neven said all japanese plane have springs. I've only said some do have one in front and or behind the blade. For such a plane the various concavities in the planes sole wouk'd not help flattening such a plane.
It would be mentioned by people who make a lot of shoji.
Based on that shoji are roomdiveders / screens a plane such as John Reed Fox uses (or one that's much simpler) is used for a lot more things. John Reed Fox site lists a lot more tpyes of furnature. One of my best friends is a scholar in the field of historic art and science and who just returned from Turkey setting up a new museum. The tings shown by John Reed Fox are not specific to Japanese shoji. Most arabic cultures have very similar techniques and decorations like John Reed Fox uses.
Or, to reiterate, bamboo springs wouldn't be of concern for tuning/reconditioning planes.
The bamboo will be thinned reducing the spring force. Also a spring in from of the blade would most probably make the gap between the blade and the spring wider. Having the same effect when widening the mouth of plane.
Wiley Horne":2v0xzws7 said:
Hi All,
Those convex/concave diagrams are just great. An excellent contribution! Further to Adrian's questions about why plane No. 2 won't take fine shavings.......In my experience, the concave plane 2 is frequently found in the wild when you acquire an unknown plane, especially a metal plane like a Stanley. It leads to erratic cutting and heavy tearout. Here's what happens, if the user is unsuspecting: he/she will tend to increase the blade depth until there is contact with the wood--at this point the blade is cantilevered beyond the sole more than it would be if there were positive support ahead of the blade. At some point in taking the shaving, the blade will catch in the wood and deflect backward and downward more deeply into the wood, then spring back bringing with it a large patch of tearout (the tearout runs ahead since the shaving is not held down). Then the blade will lose contact until another high place is encountered, at which time you get a repeat of the blade digging in deeply, springing back, and causing tearout.
Well said. As for why a scraper won't produce the tearout while having no mouth at all. A scaper's hook is pulled across the surface. A plane blade is pushed through the top layer of the surface.
In regard to dais... As delivered, this relief will leave about a 1/4" wide flat in front of the mouth: Some users will scrape this flat down to a very narrow line of contact, 1mm or less, in order to get more psi of pressure on the shaving, just ahead of the blade.
From what I've understood the planes with a spring (either brass or bamboo) in front of the blade is meant to do that exact same thing.