Phil Pascoe
Established Member
Just4Fun":2cni8y1a said:Yes, you can. For many years the only plane I owned was a number 5.JXJ_Woodwork":2cni8y1a said:Can you not do the smoothing with the no5
For many years I owned a 3, 4, 4 1/2, 5 1/2, 6, 7 and 8. I only owned a 5 when someone gave me one.
Be careful of going down a rabbit hole, you can ask twenty experienced people which planes you should own and get different answers, but it is generally accepted that a 5 or a 5 1/2 is the best general purpose plane. I would say a 5 1/2 (my first and only plane for several years) but it's only my opinion.
You can do just about anything you wish with any of them - one well known furniture maker used only a 7 - it's just that they are individually suited to certain jobs. Planing long material dead flat is miles easier with a long plane : smoothing, especially where absolute flatness isn't so important is easier with a shorter one as is chamfering edges and other small jobs. This Sellers vid is worth watching even if you don't go down the second hand route - at least you'll know what actually does what. I await someone's finding flaws in it, but there aren't many (any?) that are better.
Play from the beginning - I have no idea why the link keeps starting at various places in the middle. :?
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=RYyV6IUpsYk&t=2134s