thetyreman
Established Member
I do round off the corners very slightly on my blades but mainly on the smoothers, because it prevents tram lines on the wood.
The shavings from my wooden profile planes is straight, even though they don't have a back iron/cap iron or whatever you want to call itPretty easy to spot the difference, seeing as the shaving won't curl as readily, to not at all
depending on preference, i.e the results achieved.
Not to mention other obvious things present, like the shaving being waxy, crinkly and burnished in appearance.
Perhaps one might have other ideas as to how to achieve such brightness,
it ain't a rub of candle, nor any other wax.
It's not scraping either, should one be able to view @Pabs picture...
But perhaps yet still invisible for those whom choose to willingly have their head in the sand?
Tom
any old wood what might be selected for the task at hand...I'm not talking about flat bottom planes like smoothers, it was just an observation about what the shaving looks like from a profile moulding plane with a single iron on any old wood.
That was all.
Surpressing tram lines is my understanding of the purpose of rounding the blade edges.I do round off the corners very slightly on my blades but mainly on the smoothers, because it prevents tram lines on the wood.
Would this work with an electric planer which are very prone to leaving tram lines on even the finest settings?I do round off the corners very slightly on my blades but mainly on the smoothers, because it prevents tram lines on the wood.
No bothers Graham.Thanks for linking the video. Apologies for anyone who watched it .
It was posted in the hope that it might tease a few that haven't experimented to give it a try.
But, you don't need to. I just find it odd that people say things like a cap iron only stiffens the blade etc.
Influenced shaving. Well I have learn a new name for something I would just have called plane set up
One interesting point is that while most people might think to adjust the cap iron forward or back slightly I wonder how many people consider the angle of the cap iron and what that is doing to a shaving.
What angle do you hone your cap iron at, if you can get away with rounding corners,Maybe controversial but I generally grind/sharpen all my planes with a slight camber except for my No 4 and 4/1/2 which I grind/sharpen almost straigh with slightly rounded corners. The thinking is that when using a smooting plane I am working on larger flat surfaces doing a final clean off with very little blade projection
Certainly not, and is the usual misunderstanding of most folks.This was a practice primarily for “Smoothing planes and not “Jack planes”.
Smoothing planes are generally used for the wider boards, they took an exaggerated, concave shaving and would be easier to sand down afterwards.
Whereas the Jack, Edging plane would be truing the edge of a board when the plane blade is wider than the timber.
Tom, as a woodworker that uses planes amongst other woodworking tools my interest in this thread was prompted because of the 'influenced shavings' descriptor. That I've had things published over the years is not relevant that I can see. I admit that I seldom watch woodworking videos on places like YouTube or wherever, so the words and filmed guidance of such names as Cosman, Sellers, and others frequently mentioned on forums don't reach me directly very much. I'm also nowadays not a big reader of woodworking articles, whether they be in print, blogs, and perhaps other formats. That I now spend little time reading or viewing such information doesn't indicate a lack of interest in me about woodworking techniques and knowledge. In my early days as a learning furniture maker I avidly read books, woodworking journals, and so on. Reading about woodworking and viewing woodworking videos by contemporary authors and presenters for the most part mainly repeats information I absorbed quite a number of years ago.@Sgian Dubh Strange why such an accomplished author wouldn't be interested in such, nor haven't read or seen the evidence in post and video format, in say the last decade,
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