Eshmiel
Established Member
Its not possible with a scraper or sander either.Perfectly flat finish would be scraped and/or sanded. It's not possible with a plane alone.
The notion of flatness as being what looks flat to the human eye isn't a complete definition of flatness by any means, even though it might be a good practical definition since that's probably flat enough for many furniture making purposes (but not all). There is a geometric flatness that can't easily (or at all) be judged by eye alone. We use engineered straight edges with tiny tolerances for a reason. And those winding sticks you mention are, effectively, amplifiers enabling the eye to notice the not-flatness known as wind more easily.
A long soled plane is possibly the best tool for achieving woodworking flatness of the kind we want when making posh cabinets with only hand tools. A scraper can easily dig dips. Sanding even more so.
The matter could be subject to objective measurement rather than to a mere human eyeballing, then. A well-engineered straight edge, long enough to span a surface in any orientation, along with a set of feeler gauges, might well indicate something dipped and bumped with far more ability than a human eye. How much is that needed? That's another question.