pgrbff
Established Member
If you only had one normal size block plane is there any reason you wouldn't choose the Veritas skew block plane?
No reasoon whatsoever. I have one and it is really excellent and vastly superior in design terms to the LN which I had before the \veritas. I have other block planes, all of which I use at various times but you can't go far wrong with the Veritas skew and there are some thinks it can do that non-skew versions cannot.
I use Japanese water stones and find the PMV11 blades jsut as easy to sharpen as the A2 and they keep their edge a lot longer.
Jim
The skew block plane is a specialist tool. It can do a few things better than other planes, but a standard block plane is more generally useful and easier to set up.If you only had one normal size block plane is there any reason you wouldn't choose the Veritas skew block plane?
This is why I thought it might be good for both a small shooting board and for finishing bench saw cut raised panels for doors.The skew block plane is a specialist tool. It can do a few things better than other planes, but a standard block plane is more generally useful and easier to set up.
In brief, what the skew blade does is cut with a slicing angle. Now you can do this with any plane - any standard block plane, in particular, but the plane itself then needs to be skewed. A skew block plane (Stanley #140, LN #140, or Veritas) can complete a skew cut without skewing the plane. And it can do this where a plane cannot be skewed.
A skew cut is preferred when planing across the grain, such as with a raised panel and tenon cheeks. I have preferred it over a rabbet block plane (with has a straight blade) when tuning the inside side walls of a drawer case. Both these planes can plane to the outside of the planes body.
In regards to setting up a skew block plane, I hollow grind the bevel at 25 degrees (these planes all have a 20 degree skew), and then free hand sharpen directly on the hollow. Whether it is A2 or PM-V11, block planes hold a good edge at 25 degrees. There is no need for high bevel angles when used across the grain. The place for a higher cutting angle is when using a standard block plane for chamfers and trimming edge grain.
Regards from Perth
Derek
No need. Most of the field is easy to take off with any old sharp plane and to get into the angle against the raised bit any old rebate/shoulder/carriage etc plane will do. That is if I've got my terminology the right way around - I'm never too sure!...... for finishing bench saw cut raised panels for doors.
Tiddles, I've just fused my brain trying to do the trig. in my head to confirm that, but I cannot see how the apparent edge angle can change across a skewed blade! You'll have to explain it to me with a diagram or something....... All the skew does is lower angle of the bevel without creating a weak edge, no magic, works the same as any plane....
You are missing the skew. Imagine a normal 30º blade making slicing a cut like a knife - the effective cutting angle approaches 0º, compared to using the blade straight on and getting the full 30º...... What am I missing..??
Cheers,
The skew tends to pull the plane sideways in one direction rather than the other...having anything to do with having the blade aligned with the edge of the rebate, I can't see it matters if it's a skewed, badgered or straight blade, it's where you align the edge of the blade, surely?
Cheers,
Hmm, I think I should just let this one rest, but as I see it, it has little or nothing to do with cutting angles. Try pressing a knife directly into a piece of wood & it takes a lot of effort to get it to cut, but if you use a slicing action across the fibres (no change to "effective cutting angle" or anything else), it will cut the fibres much more easily.
And as far as having anything to do with having the blade aligned with the edge of the rebate, I can't see it matters if it's a skewed, badgered or straight blade, it's where you align the edge of the blade, surely?
Cheers,
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