Honest John
Established Member
Took delivery today of my latest auction site purchase, a record 050 combination plane complete with its original 17 cutters. Pleased with the deal and the item seems complete and little used. I downloaded the record manual from the Cornish woodworking site that holds so much information on these devices. The manual states that the "straight cutters are sharpened like plane irons and present no problems". Later in the sharpening section I says that it is undesirable to have a secondary bevel, so to my mind that's not like my plane irons! On examinining my selection of cutters, non of them seem to have a secondary bevel. It is possible that most of them have never been used and are therefore as the manufacturer supplied them. I sharpened one straight cutter on my diamond stone using my Veritas guide set at 30 deg, which seemed to be the original angle. I polished this bevel and also the back on my strop and reassembled the plane. Whilst I still have a learning curve to climb up, this cut a rabbet very well and without the noise and dust I normally associate with this process. My issue now is that when I resharpen this cutter again I will have to cut the whole bevel again, rather than touch up a small secondary bevel as I would with my chisels or plane irons. What do other people do with combination plane cutters? I am tempted to just sharpen them like my place irons, that is with a short secondary bevel. Indeed my mk2 Veritas guide actually has an adjustment to do exactly this. I'm beginning to wonder if the "no secondary bevel" was intended to refer to the moulding cutters? This is a very specific sharpening query and so I hope it doesn't cause too much of the usual grief! Secondary bevel or not. What do you use?