In my desperation to become a curmudgeonly old man and in my attempt to remove more and more power tools from the mix, I've found myself needing to trim a rebate on a couple of occasions (...where i couldn't trim the width of the component slipping into it).
Whilst veritas and lie nielsen make new ones, there are plenty of old record ones around, a few prestons and various other random bits including Stanley 79 planes. Are these good tools to have and which one is worth picking up?
Cheers
Joe
Joe, side rebate planes are one of those tools which, while many would not imagine they have much use, are an absolute treasure when needed.
There is no other plane I know which can widen a groove/housing/dado as this plane can. Some may argue that the housing should not be planes, but rather the workpiece going into it should be planed. However, this is of little use when one slides a panel along a dado, which is too narrow at one spot.
I have both (left and right) LN planes, as well as the Veritas. I purchased the LN pair about 20 years ago, and received the Veritas more than a dozen years ago when I was testing planes for Lee Valley. I like both of these. They work equally well. The Veritas has the advantage of a switching back-and-forth between left and right sides. And you do need to be able to plane each way since the cutting angle of these side rebate planes is low, which opens them up to tearing out when against the grain.
The LN ...
Not only does one widen the dado with these planes, but also they clean up the corners when sawing-chiseling-router-planing out waste ...
Any waste in the corners is removed with a side rebate plane (this is one from Veritas). be careful not to remove waste from the upper edge as this will change the position of the dado.
I also have a Stanley #79 with two fences. This plane is set up to shape sliding dovetails. It can do both the male and the female parts ...
I have modified this one by adding an angle (6:1 ratio) to the depth stop ...
By running the #79 along the edge, the angled blade will now slice away the cheek at a 6:1 ratio ...
For the female socket, start with a housing ...
... and then plane the sides ...
Regards from Perth
Derek