I think that as long as you use a flat-ish piece of plywood or mdf, you’ll be fine. That’s how it’s been done forever and very few woodworkers or even machinists have much experience in scraping. It’s an extremely laborious process. To apply it to hand planes you’d need a lot of time on your hands and you’d definitely start from where you left off with the sandpaper.
Just to illustrate the process (in case anyone‘s interested, and I’ve had a go at it) here are a few pics of the column of my surface grinder when I was refurbing it.
Basically you rub the item you want to flatten on a surface plate (known to be flat to <0.0001”) covered in blue dye, and scrape off the high spots. Eventually you even it all out and it slowly gets flatter and flatter.
See wear (gaps) at points that the knee of the grinder attached to the column. Surface plate in background.
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Getting flatter.. still low spots on the right hand side, so all of the rest of the surface need to be scraped down to match.
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View attachment 161004Arguably good enough.
With the high spots all in a physical plane around a few ten-thousandths of an inch thick, this is way OTT for any hand plane. In fact I’d think that bluing up a hand plane might be counter productive as it would lead you to believe it’s not flat, when in fact it’s perfectly flat enough for the job.
However now I have one I find all kinds of uses for the surface plate, e.g. checking straightness and flatness of all kinds of things, gluing sandpaper to it for flattening chisel backs etc. and these days accurately marking up plane blades for cutting.
Steve
See below an Eclipse scraper.
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Surface Grinder back together
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Checking a Toolstation square to see if it is square…
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