Eric The Viking
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[persevere - there is a question near the bottom!]
You know how you really want to like someone, but they have odd "social" problems?
My Stanley #50 combi plane is one such - we get on famously together for a few minutes, then it all starts to get really awkward. I think it's getting p*ssed, probably at me, but I'm not sure.
Last time was reeding: "I have those nice beading cutters", thinks I, "they ought to let me do decorative beads in a surface, and with care I could do a couple of parallel beads together." What an *****...
... So I prep some close-grained hardwood stock carefully and, observing all the rituals of Saint Royston of Underhill, start at the far end with a sharp cutter properly set and determination. Ten minutes later I have flat-topped* beads in random locations and directions across the stock, scrape marks everywhere, and several extra-brown places where my fingers have been leaking. And that's only the top surface: experienced woodworkers know that any experimental piece has FOUR sides, giving far more room for ****-ups.
By the time I retire indoors for a strong coffee (and surgical dressings), it looks like square-ish brown celery (or possibly giant hogweed would be more apt). And there's a shiny curved bit in the middle of the plane that looks like it's actually smiling at you, crookedly. So it can certainly empty a room (er, the garage) in under a half-hour.
This time I intend something simpler: I'm using up spare artificial slates as "walling" to corral the mint that's just now reappearing in the veg plot. They need to be tapped edge-on into the bed along the side of our concrete path, and as they're about 5mm thick, some softwood knocking blocks with a 1/4" groove in them would let me thump them in without doing too much damage to them.
Well the #50 set includes a 1/4" cutter (Oh goody!), and i can put a razor edge on it with ease. What I cannot do, it seems, is make a neat groove of any width or depth. Roy must have sacrificed several goats off-camera I think, as he never seemed to have this much trouble.
I do get there in the end, sufficiently so to use my test piece for clobbering slates, but again, it isn't pretty. This time, the biggest issue is keeping the cutter set to take a small bite. I don't mean shavings you can read the paper through, or anything like that, just getting it to stay put and not shift about with the pressure of the cut. There's a lever ("C" in the diagram**) for depth of cut adjustment, but it is _very_ difficult to use, and might as well be on ball bearings, since the cutter still seems to slide up and down like a tiny periscope.
THE QUESTION: What do other people do to make this a useful adjuster? It pivots on a tiny screw, and I don't think I can tighten it up enough to improve matters without stripping either the thread or the screwdriver slot. I could add a small washer, but it might make no difference.
I don't know about anyone else, but I'm forever fiddling with the adjuster on Bailey style planes, at least until I get settled on a practical depth of cut, and it seems with the #50, doing it just by eye (eyeballing the cutter protrusion below the skates), is nowhere near good enough. It's either skimming the surface or headed for Australia it seems.
The voice of experience would be welcome at this point...
Many thanks, E.
*that would be not to depth, even though I reached the depth stop, apparently.
**no I'm not posting the "helpful" diagram from the instructions. Anyway they say this about item "C":
You know how you really want to like someone, but they have odd "social" problems?
My Stanley #50 combi plane is one such - we get on famously together for a few minutes, then it all starts to get really awkward. I think it's getting p*ssed, probably at me, but I'm not sure.
Last time was reeding: "I have those nice beading cutters", thinks I, "they ought to let me do decorative beads in a surface, and with care I could do a couple of parallel beads together." What an *****...
... So I prep some close-grained hardwood stock carefully and, observing all the rituals of Saint Royston of Underhill, start at the far end with a sharp cutter properly set and determination. Ten minutes later I have flat-topped* beads in random locations and directions across the stock, scrape marks everywhere, and several extra-brown places where my fingers have been leaking. And that's only the top surface: experienced woodworkers know that any experimental piece has FOUR sides, giving far more room for ****-ups.
By the time I retire indoors for a strong coffee (and surgical dressings), it looks like square-ish brown celery (or possibly giant hogweed would be more apt). And there's a shiny curved bit in the middle of the plane that looks like it's actually smiling at you, crookedly. So it can certainly empty a room (er, the garage) in under a half-hour.
This time I intend something simpler: I'm using up spare artificial slates as "walling" to corral the mint that's just now reappearing in the veg plot. They need to be tapped edge-on into the bed along the side of our concrete path, and as they're about 5mm thick, some softwood knocking blocks with a 1/4" groove in them would let me thump them in without doing too much damage to them.
Well the #50 set includes a 1/4" cutter (Oh goody!), and i can put a razor edge on it with ease. What I cannot do, it seems, is make a neat groove of any width or depth. Roy must have sacrificed several goats off-camera I think, as he never seemed to have this much trouble.
I do get there in the end, sufficiently so to use my test piece for clobbering slates, but again, it isn't pretty. This time, the biggest issue is keeping the cutter set to take a small bite. I don't mean shavings you can read the paper through, or anything like that, just getting it to stay put and not shift about with the pressure of the cut. There's a lever ("C" in the diagram**) for depth of cut adjustment, but it is _very_ difficult to use, and might as well be on ball bearings, since the cutter still seems to slide up and down like a tiny periscope.
THE QUESTION: What do other people do to make this a useful adjuster? It pivots on a tiny screw, and I don't think I can tighten it up enough to improve matters without stripping either the thread or the screwdriver slot. I could add a small washer, but it might make no difference.
I don't know about anyone else, but I'm forever fiddling with the adjuster on Bailey style planes, at least until I get settled on a practical depth of cut, and it seems with the #50, doing it just by eye (eyeballing the cutter protrusion below the skates), is nowhere near good enough. It's either skimming the surface or headed for Australia it seems.
The voice of experience would be welcome at this point...
Many thanks, E.
*that would be not to depth, even though I reached the depth stop, apparently.
**no I'm not posting the "helpful" diagram from the instructions. Anyway they say this about item "C":
Apparently the words 'handy' and 'proper' had quite different meanings in the 1960s when my plane was made... and of course nothing about the diagram actually IS helpful."The Stanley Combination Plane has a handy Cutter Adjustment [sic], conveniently located, to obtain the proper depth of cut."