Thanks again for your thoughts. I am both mostly self taught and still learning. My interest is an expression of curiosity, and hope for improvement.
Is it any use? Only for a smoother, if you love the just-off-the-blade finish. If there's never a need for anything better, why do some folk persevere with ancient Japanese hair shirt planing technology, or go weak at the knees at the sight of an infill plane? Just because it's unaffordable?
Doesn't the measuring device wobble about? Well, the results are repeatable, and the dial gauge is clamped to the plane with a heavy, switchable magnetic clamp designed for engineering use.
The blade movement isn't large, but quite significant when compared to the thickness of a shaving. Because the blade is bending under load (as a loaded beam) the cutting edge is digging in by about the same amount as the blade lift.
Thus the Stanley blade can dig in by up to double the shaving thickness. This is reduced by a factor of ~4 by fitting a 2 piece cap iron, or a standard LN blade (3.5mm)
As DC says, the 2 piece cap iron provides its extra clamping point at the 'hinge', about 30mm up from the cutting edge. This shortens the unfixed blade length from 100mm (edge to lever cam) to 30mm, a factor of about 3. Blade stiffness WRT bending is proportional to length cubed, so a properly clamped Clifton 2 piece stiffenes the blade by 3x3x3=27 times. The downside is the lever cap is a bit too long to press in the right place (too much at edge, too little at hinge) as in practice the increase in stiffness is around only ~4 times. A couple of old lever caps are coming my way to experiment with.
Skewing the plane reduces the load on the blade by reducing both load angle and shaving width.
For comparison, a japanese blade is very much thicker/stiffer, it is held firmly along the long edges by the body (not the chipbreaker) the
That's about 4 thou - I thought a 15 thou mouth was tight. Alas I have no japanese plane to examine, but despite a lower bedding angle the shaving is still being turned through ~10+25+75=110 deg within a couple of thou of the cutting edge.
Is it any use? Only for a smoother, if you love the just-off-the-blade finish. If there's never a need for anything better, why do some folk persevere with ancient Japanese hair shirt planing technology, or go weak at the knees at the sight of an infill plane? Just because it's unaffordable?
Doesn't the measuring device wobble about? Well, the results are repeatable, and the dial gauge is clamped to the plane with a heavy, switchable magnetic clamp designed for engineering use.
The blade movement isn't large, but quite significant when compared to the thickness of a shaving. Because the blade is bending under load (as a loaded beam) the cutting edge is digging in by about the same amount as the blade lift.
Thus the Stanley blade can dig in by up to double the shaving thickness. This is reduced by a factor of ~4 by fitting a 2 piece cap iron, or a standard LN blade (3.5mm)
As DC says, the 2 piece cap iron provides its extra clamping point at the 'hinge', about 30mm up from the cutting edge. This shortens the unfixed blade length from 100mm (edge to lever cam) to 30mm, a factor of about 3. Blade stiffness WRT bending is proportional to length cubed, so a properly clamped Clifton 2 piece stiffenes the blade by 3x3x3=27 times. The downside is the lever cap is a bit too long to press in the right place (too much at edge, too little at hinge) as in practice the increase in stiffness is around only ~4 times. A couple of old lever caps are coming my way to experiment with.
Skewing the plane reduces the load on the blade by reducing both load angle and shaving width.
For comparison, a japanese blade is very much thicker/stiffer, it is held firmly along the long edges by the body (not the chipbreaker) the
(FW Dec 2000)chipbreaker is sharpened to 75 deg and set just a hair from the edge ...the mouth is set no thicker than a sheet of paper.
That's about 4 thou - I thought a 15 thou mouth was tight. Alas I have no japanese plane to examine, but despite a lower bedding angle the shaving is still being turned through ~10+25+75=110 deg within a couple of thou of the cutting edge.