Osvaldd":u82191r5 said:
custard":u82191r5 said:
using a scraper to tackle knots for fear of damaging your planer iron, well that's just nuts mate!
:lol: why? These sprouts are as hard as a rock, planing one fricking board I had to resharpen several times, If I scrape the knots first so the plane iron doesnt touch them I can extend the life of the cutting edge a fair bit, plus when scraping theres less chance of cracking the knots too.
p.s. I didn’t write the word sprout, what is going on here?
Because you're avoiding tackling a more fundamental problem with this sticking plaster of a scraper solution.
It's like a motorist who's windscreen wipers don't work, but instead of fixing them they stop the car every hundred yards and get out to clear the raindrops with a chamois leather!
It's blindingly obvious that there's something wrong with your sharpening or your planing technique!
If there's a hard knot, especially a softwood knot full of hard, dried resin, then I'd usually skew the plane as I cut through it. Do you?
But I also suspect you've cocked something else up, like your cut is too aggressive (possibly because your camber is too aggressive?), or you've drawn the temper of your iron on a power grinder, or you've sharpened at too fine an angle, or you've not actually sharpened at all because you never checked that a wire edge had formed from corner to corner, or one of the many other perfectly normal newbie mistakes.
I sympathise, I really do, when I was climbing this same learning curve I had an experienced man at my elbow who put me straight. But today tyro woodworkers are left trying to get answers from the internet, where half the people offering advice are even less experienced than you!
PS, I've met your type before, scribbling "sprouts" all over your posts then denying any knowledge