Chris_belgium
Established Member
- Joined
- 7 May 2006
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Hello,
am planning to make a drive way gate later this year, and was in my shop this afternoon doing some 'testing' on how to construct the mortice & tennons.
I made a jig and used a router to rout out the waste, keeping about 0,5mm away from the marked line, the 'ragged' edge you see is actually the line from my marking knife.
Plan was to clean them up with my shoulder plane. But this did not go well at all!! Shoulder plane I'm using is the HNT gordon 1 1/4inch shoulder plane. Problem is, even with the smallest possible blade depth I still can't make a proper shaving, I get terrible chatter and have to use a lot of force to get the plane going. Best result was some dust being shaved off, nowhere near proper shavings.
I have flattened the back of the blade, sharpened the blade to 30°, I also noticed that after I tried it a couple of times, the blade edge was jagged, when I resharpened and got a nice straight edge, a couple of tries later it was the same story.
So what am I'm doing wrong? Blade not sharp enough, wood too difficult (aphselia) to plane for a novice like me, ....
Another question, is there a trick to avoid tearout at the end of the cut? Clamping a piece of scrap wood offcourse avoids this, but is 'cumbersome' is there a faster trick to avoid this?
Thank you for your time, Chirstof.
am planning to make a drive way gate later this year, and was in my shop this afternoon doing some 'testing' on how to construct the mortice & tennons.
I made a jig and used a router to rout out the waste, keeping about 0,5mm away from the marked line, the 'ragged' edge you see is actually the line from my marking knife.
Plan was to clean them up with my shoulder plane. But this did not go well at all!! Shoulder plane I'm using is the HNT gordon 1 1/4inch shoulder plane. Problem is, even with the smallest possible blade depth I still can't make a proper shaving, I get terrible chatter and have to use a lot of force to get the plane going. Best result was some dust being shaved off, nowhere near proper shavings.
I have flattened the back of the blade, sharpened the blade to 30°, I also noticed that after I tried it a couple of times, the blade edge was jagged, when I resharpened and got a nice straight edge, a couple of tries later it was the same story.
So what am I'm doing wrong? Blade not sharp enough, wood too difficult (aphselia) to plane for a novice like me, ....
Another question, is there a trick to avoid tearout at the end of the cut? Clamping a piece of scrap wood offcourse avoids this, but is 'cumbersome' is there a faster trick to avoid this?
Thank you for your time, Chirstof.