Mike, beginning to wonder that! But a few (very few) posts have brought new stuff to light and maybe one or two have learnt something! At least it has been active!
I'm waiting for an actual user of a ramped board to describe the advantages experienced after a good few hours of actual use. Nobody has so far!MusicMan":29n1hzkc said:Jacob, by your own admission you haven't used a shooting board for 15+ years, didn't like it then and have never tried a ramped board. So who is the armchair theorist? ;-)......
Jacob":14bpds9e said:I'm waiting for an actual user of a ramped board to describe the advantages experienced after a good few hours of actual use. Nobody has so far!MusicMan":14bpds9e said:Jacob, by your own admission you haven't used a shooting board for 15+ years, didn't like it then and have never tried a ramped board. So who is the armchair theorist? ;-)......
had a look. Some strange out of this world gadgetry there! Surely he has the ramp going the wrong way - the plane is going to tend to lift the workpiece? It's not clear what experience he is confirming at all, except he manages to get the job done I presume!MusicMan":1h8k9rby said:Jacob, Derek Cohen has done just that. The link to his site was given in the second post of this thread, by Marcros.
No doubt he could add to this with subsequent experience, but he has indeed posted in this thread confirming this experience.
Keith
Tom K":1d25h8ir said:Condeesto is at one of his fine benches skew planing a long board at 22.5 degrees the board is parallel to the front of the bench and he stands in front of the bench pushing the plane along the board's grain parallel to the front of the bench. He is skew planing and this produces a skew cut.
So a 5 degree change of direction will reduce the planing "shock" effect? For all planing or just on a ramp? Very mysterious.MusicMan":3pq1s6oy said:I agree on the direction of the ramp. It would seem better to me to have the ramp on the runway, sloping down. Derek?
The point he emphasises is that the ramp (or a skew plane) introduces the blade edge to the wood progressively, rather than the sudden shock of a perpendicular edge hitting a square board. This does indeed happen and can mess up the leading edge of the wood. If a 5 degree ramp is enough to eliminate that shock, it is useful.
bugbear":hlt3c0bs said:Tom K":hlt3c0bs said:Condeesto is at one of his fine benches skew planing a long board at 22.5 degrees the board is parallel to the front of the bench and he stands in front of the bench pushing the plane along the board's grain parallel to the front of the bench. He is skew planing and this produces a skew cut.
You're almost implicitly defining your terms here, but not quite.
Can you (pretty please) be explicit about which items your angle of 22.5 degrees is measured between?
I could guess, but them we'd be using my assumptions/prejudices, not yours.
Oh, and could you define what you mean by "simulated skew"?
BugBear
bugbear":25sb8cz5 said:1) If, on a square board (say a coupla' feet on each side), we move the plane parallel in its own length, to the grain,
that's "normal planing", and definitely not skewed.
2) If we now turn the board through 45 degrees, we will now be planing corner-to-corner
but still not making a skewed cut; the planing action has not changed, merely
the angle of the workpiece relative to the planing stroke.
3) We could make a change equivalent to (2) by leaving the board where it is,
but rotating the plane, AND planing stroke through 45 degrees. The plane
is now (as in (2)) moving in its own length, corner to corner on the board,
and it's still not a skewed cut.
4) But a ramped shooting board is exactly case (3), where the ramp rotates the planing
stroke relative to the workpiece. Therefore it's (still) not a skewed cut.
(I've made the skew angle a nice big 45 to make everything more obvious)
BugBear
condeesteso":29a1qhpk said:Obtuse? at least there would be an angle involved which is NOT 90 DEGREES. That would be progress.
planing...cutting...bored now. I'm off.
condeesteso":4vbqiq6e said:Obtuse? at least there would be an angle involved which is NOT 90 DEGREES. That would be progress.
planing...cutting...bored now. I'm off.
bugbear":hcdzhz9d said:condeesteso":hcdzhz9d said:Obtuse? at least there would be an angle involved which is NOT 90 DEGREES. That would be progress.
planing...cutting...bored now. I'm off.
Agreed. Any further discussion would likely just be (more ) repetition.
BugBear
Enter your email address to join: