The advantage of a dedicated shooting plane is very marginal (if anything at all) and it certainly wouldn't show on the finished item.
Hi Jacob
This is one of those statements that is neither correct nor incorrect. Consequently no one challenges it, and it passes into Truth (which it is not).
No one tool is completely indispensable. It is possible to work around just about anything (my chair build is in this category).
If I were a professional woodworker I would be looking to get away with the fewest number of tools that will still do the job. Less to maintain, less outlay, and a larger profit margin. Some tools will be a compromise - do the job tolerably well, not as well as a dedicated tool, but good enough. My first handplane on a shooting board was a #5 1/2. I was not complaining.
The dedicated shooting plane is a pleasure to use. There is nothing like one for sneaking up on a perfect fit for a drawer front. Of course you can do this with the #5 1/2 as well - just not as delicately, as smoothly, or with the same ease to reach this level of precision. And then some dedicated shooting planes do this better than others - more comfort, better control, easier to set up, etc.
Only you can decide if these factors are important to you. It is not a right or wrong thing. It is a choice.
Regards from Perth
Derek
But you claim that the quoted section of Jacob's post is not truth ("... and it passes into Truth (which it is not))"
What part isn't true? The quoted section of Jacob's post states that the advantage is marginal and that the results do not show on the finished item. I think both of these assertions are very much true. Drawers can be made to fit with a plane and there is nobody in the world who could ever tell if said plane was used whilst riding on a shooting board or not or if it was a dedicated shooting board plane. Alan Peters comes immediately to mind, or maybe he used his Record 07 on a shooting board. If anybody could make a drawer fit it was Peters.
After having made an actual outlay of funds, or perhaps even received one for free, there are very few people who will feel that they somehow 'don't like it,' at least not early in their ownership. Which brings up a question - whatever became of the Marcou handplanes you reviewed a few years ago? They still kickin' around the shop? If I recall, they were the cat's pajamas at the time only to never be heard about again. It would be tragic if they're just sitting in a drawer somewhere.
Marcou plane review:
http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ToolReview ... other.html
Does one really need PMVII:
"It should also be recorded that the Veritas' A2 blades used by the Marcou and BUS held an excellent edge throughout. They completed the entire planing extravaganza without being re-honed."
... and in Jarrah and Tasmanian Blackwood...