Jimson
Member
Any suggestions on the following would be much appreciated:
I made a shooting board following instructions in Vic Tesolin's great book The Minimalist Woodworker (it'll be me that's getting it wrong, not VT or his instructions) . It seems okay - it's square in the places it needs to be, and square when I offer the sole of the plane up to the fence and side of the runner.
I've been working on a piece of poplar (about half an inch thick, 5" wide and a foot long), just trying to get the end grain square, but it's not happening. I'm using an Axminster low angle jack plane (No.62). I've tried several pieces and alternatives, pine seems to square better but the poplar is ending up with a high spot in the middle or sometimes one corner ends up higher than the other. It's a real mess and the harder I try at it the worse the piece seems to get. On a short piece it can end up 2 or 3 mm down at the corner, and I can't understand how it's going so wrong. I'm careful to check for square, and I seemed to be seeing it, but the results are saying otherwise.
I thought I was using a sharp plane iron, but I'm beginning to have my doubts that it's sharp enough. When I sharpen it I get it so that it can cut paper. But in use on the shooting board, the waste coming off the poplar board is dust rather than shavings.
Could the problem be sharpness? Any other likely beginner errors I've given away?
Many thanks
Jim
I made a shooting board following instructions in Vic Tesolin's great book The Minimalist Woodworker (it'll be me that's getting it wrong, not VT or his instructions) . It seems okay - it's square in the places it needs to be, and square when I offer the sole of the plane up to the fence and side of the runner.
I've been working on a piece of poplar (about half an inch thick, 5" wide and a foot long), just trying to get the end grain square, but it's not happening. I'm using an Axminster low angle jack plane (No.62). I've tried several pieces and alternatives, pine seems to square better but the poplar is ending up with a high spot in the middle or sometimes one corner ends up higher than the other. It's a real mess and the harder I try at it the worse the piece seems to get. On a short piece it can end up 2 or 3 mm down at the corner, and I can't understand how it's going so wrong. I'm careful to check for square, and I seemed to be seeing it, but the results are saying otherwise.
I thought I was using a sharp plane iron, but I'm beginning to have my doubts that it's sharp enough. When I sharpen it I get it so that it can cut paper. But in use on the shooting board, the waste coming off the poplar board is dust rather than shavings.
Could the problem be sharpness? Any other likely beginner errors I've given away?
Many thanks
Jim