Sawdust=manglitter":jw8omllu said:Am I missing something here... When you say a 'double iron', do you mean with the Veritas cap iron?
Yes.
Sawdust=manglitter":jw8omllu said:Am I missing something here... When you say a 'double iron', do you mean with the Veritas cap iron?
essexalan":11r6vkxp said:Are those Tsunesaburo irons the same as Smoothcut? No longer cheap in the UK £36.80 plus P&P plus the dreaded customs duty and Parcel Forces cut if they catch you. I don't know why Stanley and Record can't make blades the way they used to or even the planes themselves, not a big enough market I guess. Had to laugh I have just refurbed a UK made Stanley Bailey 5 1/2 and the PM-V11 slotted in with a bit of a mouth clean up. Tried putting a standard Stanley blade in and it would not bed on the frog depth and lateral adjustment were terrible. Found that somebody had replaced the rivet on the lateral adjustment roller and left a little too much metal sticking up so the back of the blade was pivoting on it. Quick rub with a file sorted that.
D_W":2n5xthh6 said:essexalan":2n5xthh6 said:Are those Tsunesaburo irons the same as Smoothcut? No longer cheap in the UK £36.80 plus P&P plus the dreaded customs duty and Parcel Forces cut if they catch you. I don't know why Stanley and Record can't make blades the way they used to or even the planes themselves, not a big enough market I guess. Had to laugh I have just refurbed a UK made Stanley Bailey 5 1/2 and the PM-V11 slotted in with a bit of a mouth clean up. Tried putting a standard Stanley blade in and it would not bed on the frog depth and lateral adjustment were terrible. Found that somebody had replaced the rivet on the lateral adjustment roller and left a little too much metal sticking up so the back of the blade was pivoting on it. Quick rub with a file sorted that.
Yes, same as tsunesaburo. Not sure why they are marked with two different brands.
Charles, I think that is just typical Commie propaganda.
Regards from Perth
Derek
swagman":o6r7s2sx said:
CStanford":706pq4jb said:In the genre I suppose.
On the other hand, Stanley and Record both sold HSS cutters in the Southern Hemisphere decades ago and Kunz still make them last I checked (Two Cherries too; see below). They are pricey, though. One has always had options, though wallet-stinging ones. If it were all about 'getting the work done' and suffering actual quantifiable shop inefficiencies then Kunz would have been a logical choice or source the Stanley and Record cutters through used tool dealers. It's amazing, isn't it, how one's needs change when a new product comes to market. It's what marketers call 'supply creating its own demand.'
Sources:
http://www.petermcbride.com/hss_stanley/
Two Cherries 45mm, 48mm, and 51mm HSS replacement irons:
https://twocherriesusa.com/product/hss-plane-iron/
CStanford":1d4n53dk said:swagman":1d4n53dk said:
Without doubt they do seem to have the waterfront covered with regard to steels for various applications and woods. HAP 40 sounds like PM-V11 or maybe that should be vice versa?
CStanford":31ru79gl said:There is apparently a market for HSS plane irons comprised of people who can't/couldn't wait for boutique makers to get around to 'innovating.' These irons appear to have been in continuous production, by someone, for quite a number of decades. If you need durability you need it, whether or not it's ones pet or favorite manufacturer or not, no?
CStanford":25cfv6lh said:There is apparently a market for HSS plane irons comprised of people who can't/couldn't wait for boutique makers to get around to 'innovating.' These irons appear to have been in continuous production, by someone, for quite a number of decades. If you need durability you need it, whether or not it's ones pet or favorite manufacturer or not, no?
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