interesting though it all is, i do think we are in danger of frightening our new friend off :lol:
so a couple of thoughts. the first thing is to get the plane actually cutting wood, so.
start by striping the thing down, if necessary take a couple of polaroids or even digital photos to ensure you know where the bits go.
clean up the blade and the chip breaker, and make sure they sit together properly with no gaps. then sharpen the blade. aim for initially a good edge straight across. to do this you need to make the bit without the bevel smooth too, and the charlesworth method of the ruler trick makes that easier. however you do need a sharpening medium. start out with sandpaper or wet and dry attached to a piece of thick mdf, and work through the grades down until you have a narrow strip of clean smooth looking surface. a 6in ch metal ruler at the edge of the board and the blade front about 3-4 inches in front will mean you are not spending hours getting this bit flat and smooth.
next either buy a cheap hilka or similar guide, under 10 quid, or make your own, and start sharpening the bevel side to 30 degrees. again work through the grades until you have a smooth almost polished shape which is constant across. then you have to find an old leather belt, and remove the curly bit on the flat side, and then use for instance autosol to polish/hone the bevel.
now you should have a blade which is better than the one you started with.
now re-assemble the blade and chip breaker.place the whole plane on the bench flat, and slide the blade down until it touches the surface, and tighten it to the frog.
now you should have a plane with no projection of the blade.
now pick it up, and then turn it over, and place the whole over a piece of white paper. looking from the front down to the paper you are now trying to get so you can see, just, the blade. you do this by rotating the wheel at the back, what you are trying to do is to push the blade down to adjust
and minimise the backlash, or movement between the wheel gears.
when you can see the blade, stop. now try cutting a bit of wood with it.
it might also be your technique, and you could try cutting across the grain as well as along with the grain.
if you can get this far, then you are ready to start the real fettling process.
good luck
paul :wink: