From the many YouTube tutorials I've seen, a shooting board should be a quick project that a relatively inexperienced woodworker can do. But I am struggling with getting square ends and am on the verge of throwing out my 3rd attempt.
For some reason, I just can't get it to be square after shooting, it's always too high on one end or the other. I am using a Starrett combo square which I have checked against a square edge.
Given I get ~3hr a week of woodworking, hand tools only, trying to make an accurate shooting board has become a massive time sink and is draining a lot of joy out of making stuff.
Any thoughts on what I'm doing wrong?
For my first attempt (2x ikea melamine) I followed Derek Cohen's guide. After being unable to get square ends and realising my first cheap combo square was out, I binned it.
For my 2nd attempt (mdf base, plywood top), I didn't want to clamp my Starrett (wallet was still hurting) so I only used it to square up my fence and set it 90° where the plane runs as seen in many YouTube videos. It was out and I tried shimming it with paper and adding an adjustable fence (similar to Mitch Peakcock's YouTube video). After a million attempts to square things up and making fine adjustments to the fence, I discovered my Stanley no 5 was not actually flat (probably messed it up when lapping the sole!). Luckily I have a spare Record no 5 which I hadn't 'restored' and seemed flat enough and tried again. Still no luck with that and after a wasted week while off from work, I decided to try again.
Attempt no 3 starts with plywood drawer bottoms from a thrown out wardrobe - very poor quality ply with stuck on wood paper pattern but at least it had a straight edge and is quite flat - not 100% but probably good enough? I put on a fence taking care to square it up. After a night of drying followed by screws, I shot a piece and it was still out!
Despite all the woodworking videos, forum posts, blog posts, etc, I've seen, accuracy continues to evade me!
I know there are commercially available versions but I am not willing to throw money at the problem without understanding what I'm doing wrong. I know my Record's side isn't 90° to the sole and have been using lateral adjustment to compensate. Apart from shooting square, I get good results from this plane, giving me very fine end grain shavings.
For some reason, I just can't get it to be square after shooting, it's always too high on one end or the other. I am using a Starrett combo square which I have checked against a square edge.
Given I get ~3hr a week of woodworking, hand tools only, trying to make an accurate shooting board has become a massive time sink and is draining a lot of joy out of making stuff.
Any thoughts on what I'm doing wrong?
For my first attempt (2x ikea melamine) I followed Derek Cohen's guide. After being unable to get square ends and realising my first cheap combo square was out, I binned it.
For my 2nd attempt (mdf base, plywood top), I didn't want to clamp my Starrett (wallet was still hurting) so I only used it to square up my fence and set it 90° where the plane runs as seen in many YouTube videos. It was out and I tried shimming it with paper and adding an adjustable fence (similar to Mitch Peakcock's YouTube video). After a million attempts to square things up and making fine adjustments to the fence, I discovered my Stanley no 5 was not actually flat (probably messed it up when lapping the sole!). Luckily I have a spare Record no 5 which I hadn't 'restored' and seemed flat enough and tried again. Still no luck with that and after a wasted week while off from work, I decided to try again.
Attempt no 3 starts with plywood drawer bottoms from a thrown out wardrobe - very poor quality ply with stuck on wood paper pattern but at least it had a straight edge and is quite flat - not 100% but probably good enough? I put on a fence taking care to square it up. After a night of drying followed by screws, I shot a piece and it was still out!
Despite all the woodworking videos, forum posts, blog posts, etc, I've seen, accuracy continues to evade me!
I know there are commercially available versions but I am not willing to throw money at the problem without understanding what I'm doing wrong. I know my Record's side isn't 90° to the sole and have been using lateral adjustment to compensate. Apart from shooting square, I get good results from this plane, giving me very fine end grain shavings.