custard
Established Member
A few months ago there was a thread about laminated versus non laminated plane irons, I've been meaning to pick through my plane irons and see if I could add anything to the discussion.
I'm no tool historian, so take this as a series of data points for the more knowledgeable people here to reflect upon.
The most common Record plane irons generally look something like this, with slightly rounded tops,
The only foolproof way that I know to check if you have a laminated iron is to grind the entire cutting edge at a 25 degree angle. Once you hone a bevel the lamination line becomes very difficult to detect, in fact it becomes easy to kid yourself that you have a laminated iron when it's actually not. Grinding the entire cutting edge on the previous Record iron reveals no trace of a lamination line,
However, this American Stanley Sweetheart iron has much more angular top, comprised of straight lines with crisp corners,
And when the cutting edge is fully ground you can see the lamination line (marked with the red arrow), if you tilt the iron back and forth you can see this line runs the full width of the blade,
Here's an English made Stanley iron with the same angular top, on this iron there is what looks like a lamination line on the face. In my experience (which is only based on a few dozen irons so is far from definitive), the lamination line on the face is not a reliable indicator, I've seen laminated irons where there's no face line, and I've seen non laminated irons where there's a convincing looking line in the right area.
As I said, the only accurate test I know is a full grind. When this English Stanley iron is ground back you can clearly see it is indeed laminated,
I'll need to continue in a follow up post as there's a limit as to how many photos can go in one post.
I'm no tool historian, so take this as a series of data points for the more knowledgeable people here to reflect upon.
The most common Record plane irons generally look something like this, with slightly rounded tops,
The only foolproof way that I know to check if you have a laminated iron is to grind the entire cutting edge at a 25 degree angle. Once you hone a bevel the lamination line becomes very difficult to detect, in fact it becomes easy to kid yourself that you have a laminated iron when it's actually not. Grinding the entire cutting edge on the previous Record iron reveals no trace of a lamination line,
However, this American Stanley Sweetheart iron has much more angular top, comprised of straight lines with crisp corners,
And when the cutting edge is fully ground you can see the lamination line (marked with the red arrow), if you tilt the iron back and forth you can see this line runs the full width of the blade,
Here's an English made Stanley iron with the same angular top, on this iron there is what looks like a lamination line on the face. In my experience (which is only based on a few dozen irons so is far from definitive), the lamination line on the face is not a reliable indicator, I've seen laminated irons where there's no face line, and I've seen non laminated irons where there's a convincing looking line in the right area.
As I said, the only accurate test I know is a full grind. When this English Stanley iron is ground back you can clearly see it is indeed laminated,
I'll need to continue in a follow up post as there's a limit as to how many photos can go in one post.