Ransoman
Established Member
I make no secrets that I am very much new to woodworking and therefor have little to no experience.
I have always believed that you should buy the best tools you can afford as they perform better, last longer and hold value. With that I snapped up the chance to get a much discounted Veritas block plane and Plough plane from Dieter schmidt a few months back.
I very much like both tools, they feel excellently crafted and of very high quality. I bough both with the plan of making a lot of drawers for some custom furniture at home.
Initial testing with the plough plane went well and I am very happy with how easy it is to use. I just need to work on my hand position a bit so that I am putting the correct pressure on the guide rather than the handle.
I went to use the Block plane to trim some end grain on a wall stud just to shave off 1mm so that it would fit and this is when my mistake happened. The stud was clean and cut on one end only. The end that I was going to trim was the unsawn end so it had the barcode staple still in. I extracted this completely, had a good look at the end, decided it was clean and made my first ever swipe with the block plane..... Turns out there was a tiny bit of glass/grit, completely invisible to me in amongst the fibres that I just couldn't see and I now have a nice deep scratch on the beautifully polished sole, mouth plate and a nik in the blade.
I have managed to repair the blade by re-sharpening on some wet and dry paper but my honing guide didn't seem to work properly with the tapered plane iron so it wasn't perfect but at least I have rid of the nik so it cuts cleanly again. But I still have the scratch.
They day went downhill from there, I broke the handle of a trigger clamp then accidently hammered my chisel into a hidden screw and wrecked the edge. Fortunately it was just a B&Q cheapy.
Lesson learned, be more carefull and only trim cleanly cut edges. Also, watch out for grit
I have always believed that you should buy the best tools you can afford as they perform better, last longer and hold value. With that I snapped up the chance to get a much discounted Veritas block plane and Plough plane from Dieter schmidt a few months back.
I very much like both tools, they feel excellently crafted and of very high quality. I bough both with the plan of making a lot of drawers for some custom furniture at home.
Initial testing with the plough plane went well and I am very happy with how easy it is to use. I just need to work on my hand position a bit so that I am putting the correct pressure on the guide rather than the handle.
I went to use the Block plane to trim some end grain on a wall stud just to shave off 1mm so that it would fit and this is when my mistake happened. The stud was clean and cut on one end only. The end that I was going to trim was the unsawn end so it had the barcode staple still in. I extracted this completely, had a good look at the end, decided it was clean and made my first ever swipe with the block plane..... Turns out there was a tiny bit of glass/grit, completely invisible to me in amongst the fibres that I just couldn't see and I now have a nice deep scratch on the beautifully polished sole, mouth plate and a nik in the blade.
I have managed to repair the blade by re-sharpening on some wet and dry paper but my honing guide didn't seem to work properly with the tapered plane iron so it wasn't perfect but at least I have rid of the nik so it cuts cleanly again. But I still have the scratch.
They day went downhill from there, I broke the handle of a trigger clamp then accidently hammered my chisel into a hidden screw and wrecked the edge. Fortunately it was just a B&Q cheapy.
Lesson learned, be more carefull and only trim cleanly cut edges. Also, watch out for grit