Charles, I chose my words carefully. "are well placed to launch these again". I bought a modern Stanley, the worst tool I have ever bought. I could have been unlucky but this is what I found. Hollow plastic handles ready to break at a moments notice, I find that to be unforgivable. Plastic is a pragmatic and excellent choice for tools if correctly specified. Hollow, thin rubbish was a stupid move by the accounts department. In addition the casting was awful, again could have been a dud but it looked to of been prepped on 40grit. Then there was the price, between £40 >£60 depending where you shop was insulting. Time to "launch these again" with a view to quality taking a sensible change and not it terms of polished surfaces and exotic wood. Just solid workmanlike details. I dislike being rude or brutal about anything in this world but for hate's sake I would spit my last breath at that POS stanley #4 :lol: 8)
Keith, thank you
. I just hope it did not come over as "you should go for one" or "do it this way" . Merely it was an experiment. Important factors are a flat enough sole, sharp iron, stable foundation for handles and tote, a level of comfort, adjustments that work and a cap iron able to control surface finish. Although in need of some work the Silverline was able to do it's job. I still like anything plane shaped and I still feel that the best value tool is still the WoodRiver/Quangsheng that Peter & Matthew offer, even if you can only stretch to one, say a smoother it'll surely save a massive amount of time fooling around.
Hey Mike, cheers dude
. Yes the right level or more than the right level of sharp will get you to a very happy way of working. Agreed on the sharpening media too, however it creates and interesting choice. You'll need a decent sharpening setup regardless and as I touch on in the video honey badger don't give a $h!t
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4r7wHMg5Yjg about how anyones sharpens and on what. I was tempted to smash a lump of slate off an old worktop with a sledgehammer and sharpen on that (I'm serious) but I only have so much time. But I will do that video soon.
The stones are shapton, seem good value. I've had 'em for about 3 or four months. Not sure how I feel about them but they seem ok. On the plane, I'm going to keep tight lipped. Something to look forward to or not as the case might be (hammer)
Novocaine, it might be worth doing that or doing what I did might p!ss him off and put him off
. If he's new he might want to consider something that works out of the box so to speak. But for £13 it could be used as a novelty door stop!
Seems fair BB
CC yes and yes! If you are a total newb without a friendly woodbutcher to guide you it could be a waste of time. And regardless most people don't rock the total no power way of working. The cost of 1 x decent smoother, although high, would be a worthy purchase for most.
Cheers for the link Cordy. Problem with that devil is it looks to have the curse of the hollow plastic handle!