paulrockliffe
Established Member
It's been bugging me for a while, so I'm just going to ask:
Why does a hand plane have a flat sole, but a power plane or a jointer have the sole in two parts with the depth of cut being controlled by the off-set between the two surfaces?
With a hand plane the blade sits lower than all of the surface, so when you're making a cut you start with the front of the plane resting on the wood and following the wood surface, but as you get towards the end, you run out of wood to rest the plane on and support then comes from the rear of the plane. But the rear of the plane is resting at a level that has been reduced by the plane blade's cut, so tilts the plane body and raises the cut. I think.
Anyway, I'm obviously missing something and would like to know what it is.
Thanks
Why does a hand plane have a flat sole, but a power plane or a jointer have the sole in two parts with the depth of cut being controlled by the off-set between the two surfaces?
With a hand plane the blade sits lower than all of the surface, so when you're making a cut you start with the front of the plane resting on the wood and following the wood surface, but as you get towards the end, you run out of wood to rest the plane on and support then comes from the rear of the plane. But the rear of the plane is resting at a level that has been reduced by the plane blade's cut, so tilts the plane body and raises the cut. I think.
Anyway, I'm obviously missing something and would like to know what it is.
Thanks