I just dug out and fettled a Footprint No. 5 as a jack/scrub for a friend who's planing down a wide table top glue up which is a little bit in wind... (Also lent him a big woodie panel plane, and No.4, along with doing a quick "how to session on tge techniques and process forplaning a wide surface flat).
I put a fairly harsh (maybe 6¾") radius on the blade which was ok, but in order to get the setup right, needed to get the cap iron further down... I plonked it down on the tool rest flat and ground the profile of the iron onto the (nice thick accommodatin, flat) mating surface, then went to re-grind the angle of the chip breaker on top, which was where the fun started; long story short, the shape of the cap-iron makes it surprisingly easy to take off more material than you really want to, and I had to go back further than planned, as well as taking metal off the mating surface to get it fitting nicely.
Is grinding the profile by taking off all material with the cap-iron held freehand (not on the tool rest) at the desired angl right from the start, a better approach for this, or is it just a pig of a job, where past a certain radius you'd be better off just making a form and hot-bending the correct shape of cap-iron with the desired radius?
I put a fairly harsh (maybe 6¾") radius on the blade which was ok, but in order to get the setup right, needed to get the cap iron further down... I plonked it down on the tool rest flat and ground the profile of the iron onto the (nice thick accommodatin, flat) mating surface, then went to re-grind the angle of the chip breaker on top, which was where the fun started; long story short, the shape of the cap-iron makes it surprisingly easy to take off more material than you really want to, and I had to go back further than planned, as well as taking metal off the mating surface to get it fitting nicely.
Is grinding the profile by taking off all material with the cap-iron held freehand (not on the tool rest) at the desired angl right from the start, a better approach for this, or is it just a pig of a job, where past a certain radius you'd be better off just making a form and hot-bending the correct shape of cap-iron with the desired radius?