Hi
I have always been a bit puzzled by the way my planes depth adjustment must be tweaked when I use my shooting board.
When cutting end grain with the board, I set the iron depth as usually recommended - I back the iron until it no longer touches the wood, then advance it by steps until I feel it catching, then adjust depth for the thickness I want.
Now, what puzzles me - if immediatly afterwards I use the same plane for edge planing the same board, I must back the iron some - maybe close to a quarter of a turn or so - otherwise the having will be too thick.
When I adjust my plane for edge planing, and then go on using the shooting board with the same plane, the reverse happens - I must increase slightly the depth of cut, otherwise the iron will not touch the wood.
I work almost exclusively soft woods (nordic white pine). My self-made shooting board seems to be sound, and it surely is square.
The procedure I use when shooting is: press the workpiece against both the fence and the sole of the plane with one hand, press the plane (hard) against both the edge and the "platform" of the S.B. (no pun intended...). Plane lubrication is candlewax.
Now, am I doing something wrong, or may there be something wrong with my gear, or is this a usual occurrence?
Not that it worries me a lot, I learned to live with it since a couple years ago or so when I built that board, but it does puzzle me.
Can anyone help me understand what may be happening?
Thanks
I have always been a bit puzzled by the way my planes depth adjustment must be tweaked when I use my shooting board.
When cutting end grain with the board, I set the iron depth as usually recommended - I back the iron until it no longer touches the wood, then advance it by steps until I feel it catching, then adjust depth for the thickness I want.
Now, what puzzles me - if immediatly afterwards I use the same plane for edge planing the same board, I must back the iron some - maybe close to a quarter of a turn or so - otherwise the having will be too thick.
When I adjust my plane for edge planing, and then go on using the shooting board with the same plane, the reverse happens - I must increase slightly the depth of cut, otherwise the iron will not touch the wood.
I work almost exclusively soft woods (nordic white pine). My self-made shooting board seems to be sound, and it surely is square.
The procedure I use when shooting is: press the workpiece against both the fence and the sole of the plane with one hand, press the plane (hard) against both the edge and the "platform" of the S.B. (no pun intended...). Plane lubrication is candlewax.
Now, am I doing something wrong, or may there be something wrong with my gear, or is this a usual occurrence?
Not that it worries me a lot, I learned to live with it since a couple years ago or so when I built that board, but it does puzzle me.
Can anyone help me understand what may be happening?
Thanks