It is a bit stop and start this project but some progress made over the weekend.
I think I had shown you the cap iron which was supplied just as a casting
I think I have also mentioned the lever cap screw was awful - an M8 steel threaded rod secured into a rather inferior looking piece of brass, so I decided to replace the screw with a 7/16-10 acme threaded version. I bought an appropriate tap and die from rdgtools which arrived friday
I started by marking by eye the centre of where the cap screw will be as shown and drilled out an 8.5mm hole which is the closet I had to the 8.7mm I had calculated from various online formulae (OD in inches - pitch/10 +0.005) then converted to mm or something like that
Then I tapped that 8.5mm hole using the 7/16 acme tap - easy as anything using generous amounts of cutting fluid
Then I made the sides parallel by milling the edges. The internal width of the plane is 63.3mm so I made the lever cap 62.8mm wide
Then it was just a case of filing the body of the lever cap down, bit by bit using decreasing grades of file and drinking a lot of tea. I actually switched to Abranet 120, 180, 240 and 320 as this seemed to be an easier way of doing the smoothing. Then I used my recently acquired metal polishing wheels on a bench grinder with waxes that I had bought from metalpolishingsupplies.co.uk
http://www.metalpolishingsupplies.c...aluminium-brass-steel-stainless-steel-11pc-8/ - OMG the transformation. In literally no time I went from that very rough looking casting to this
I cannot cut the lever cap screw yet as I need a holder (handle) 33mm in diameter for the die
So I started thinking about the inflll
Purists need to look away now as I have been doing an experiment for the last few days in the rapid drying of timber on an oven
We cut down a rather sweet little weeping beech tree recently - the top of which had the most figured beech I have ever seen. I know it is only beech but even so I thought it would make for interesting infills and also a memory of this tree which was small and right in way of SWIMBO's view down the garden (we planted 4 other trees the same day I cut it down to offset our guilt). So I cut it up, placed it on the Aga and have been drying them it all week. It is now down to 8% or less I think, and the weight loss each day has dramatically fallen
I chose this piece for the front bun which I thought would be by far the easiest piece to make (and therefore abandon if it is no good)
So hare is the rough cut front bun awaiting some serious shaping and fitting
I have my eye on this piece for the rear infill, which, shakes aside, has a beautiful curve to do the curved handle bit. We will see
More soon!
Thanks for looking
Mark