Hi all
I have above restored plane, but the handle wobbles a bit and I cannot tighten the screw any tighter. Any ideas?
I have above restored plane, but the handle wobbles a bit and I cannot tighten the screw any tighter. Any ideas?
Take the nut out and drop in a washer. The perfect fit can be found on a road-bike wheel - the nut from a presta valve.Hi all
I have above restored plane, but the handle wobbles a bit and I cannot tighten the screw any tighter. Any ideas?
How does that work when you need to screw the nut further down the thread?Cut a bit off the threaded rod, it's another Paul Seller's top tip
How does that work when you need to screw the nut further down the thread?
Take the nut out and drop in a washer. The perfect fit can be found on a road-bike wheel - the nut from a presta valve.
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It is ill advised to grind non-ferrous metals (aluminium, copper, brass etc) on a bench grinder. They load the stone with smeared metal that generates heat from friction, causing the rim of the wheel to expand and explode. While a washer or two may not do it eventually you will push things too far. It is a practice that kills people. If you want to grind non ferrous use a belt sander/grinder.Brass would be nicest job I reckon, should you have some old hinges, or even an old brass key possibly knocking about.
Drilled to size then cut roughly thereafter, a bit of rod or whatever, tightly fitting for a mandrel chucked into a hand drill and over to the bench grinder to make round.
The nut’s bottoming out on the threaded bar.How does that work when you need to screw the nut further down the thread?
Solution then is packers (under the handle sounds best to me), washers (messy) or gulp,The nut’s bottoming out on the threaded bar.
If you haven't got an old inner tube you could ask in a bike shop or a neighbour with a bike. I've got several old planes with these in place as washers.Take the nut out and drop in a washer. The perfect fit can be found on a road-bike wheel - the nut from a presta valve.
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Overthinking this, just do as Jacob suggested and no repair will be visible.Solution then is packers (under the handle sounds best to me), washers (messy) or gulp,
find a die same thread (anyone?) and add a bit more thread?
A veneer / shaving / whatever shim under the handle sounds the best bodge?
See image of a standard No 4 1/2 tote retaining screwSurely it wouldn't bottom out with thread left?
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