iNewbie
Established Member
D_W":14vp8ftz said:This Charles is much more recognizable.
Since nobody else did it, I searched through the old posts on this site and I looked for anyone who commented on "chipbreaker, tearout" or "cap iron, tearout". There was a single person who suggested using the cap iron to eliminate tearout, a user who goes by the handle IVAN. Ivan's second post is a situation where he was actually using it.
Bravo, Ivan.
Nobody responded a peep to what he said, even when people disagreed with his assessment that the cap iron can provide a steepened angle like a scraper, but with a more favorable surface quality (which is exactly correct). Again, not getting into the argument that a customer usually has no clue what's sanded or planed, I worked for 3 summers in a cabinet factory with 500 employees and I certainly never saw anything other than wax sticks and shellac sticks to fix problems on doors and face frames, and we made 3000-3500 cabinets a week and never had trouble selling any for issues outside of *color matching*.
Ivan posted accurately about using the cap iron once in 2007 and once in 2009. In a world of such common knowledge, i'm surprised that someone didn't agree with him when others were disagreeing. I guess it was too subtle, and it just went by, even though it's buried in the research results between gobs of posts talking about chipbreakers stabilizing blades and needing heavier and thicker blades or heavier cap irons.
It seems much easier to point out you heard it or read it before (as I suggested to Bill we'd hear), but the actually suggestion of *doing* it with an accurate bit of instruction doesn't appear on this site that I can see except from above. that's too bad. It probably would've saved a lot of people a lot of money that they could've spent on wood and finish supplies.
David I think you'll find Ivan was inspired by the Kato video. I think his knowledge was internet gained... Theres a post from 2006 (a year before your 2007 post) talking about it.
I'm not sure why you have a hard-on for David C but he replies on page two of that Ivan thread and of using a close setting: plane-whispering-of-bevel-angle-and-frog-t13410-15.html
In 2012 he mentions: The setting is quite difficult but not impossible. I find this research most exciting and a little galling, as the advice I have given over the last 35 years or so could have been better. i.e. Close is not good enough, ultra close works like magic.
new-planing-behaviour-knowledge-microscopes-etc-t61233.html
I'm not sure what you are looking for but he certainly isn't hiding anything.
/and no I'm not a fanboy I just respect the guys credentials.