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[email protected] March 11th 19 06:33 PM

Manual plane
 
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.

Bob Minchin[_4_] March 11th 19 07:37 PM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.

A used no4 off ebay should do you nicely

newshound March 11th 19 08:15 PM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 19:37, Bob Minchin wrote:
On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in
particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded,
cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt),
router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to
break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This
applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to
cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty.
However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still
annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a
circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to
make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust
everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in
mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in
length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed),
what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.

A used no4 off ebay should do you nicely.


Agreed, and I have one (but havn't used it for years). I used to rely on
my late FIL to sharpen it (master builder) and I've never got anywhere
near his technique. I do have a (cheap) power plane, but that very
seldom comes out too.

If you are only cutting sheet, use a circular saw and a sawboard for
straight cuts. Then just sand.

Brian Gaff March 11th 19 09:29 PM

Manual plane
 
I used to love my Record Plane when I could see. Something very therapeutic
about planing wood you know.
Brian

--
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This newsgroup posting comes to you directly from...
The Sofa of Brian Gaff...

Blind user, so no pictures please
Note this Signature is meaningless.!
"Bob Minchin" wrote in message
...
On 11/03/2019 18:33,
wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular,
power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi
& SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw,
jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break
out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies
particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble
together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However,
while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me
to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw
would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to
make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust
everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind,
does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length
and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size
(length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.

A used no4 off ebay should do you nicely




[email protected] March 11th 19 10:03 PM

Manual plane
 
On Monday, 11 March 2019 18:33:35 UTC, wrote:

In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.


New or used makes no difference unless it's damaged. There is more than one way to set the blade position, some mechanisms are easier to set accurately than others. Knocking a wedge in is the crude option, though it's quite usable.

I used to see toy planes in the likes of poundland decades ago, needless to say they were junk, as I discovered once when left one & I thought I'd see if it was usable. It wasn't.

You could always make your own from a lump of hardwood. They're not rocket science, a home made plane can fly.


NT

newshound March 11th 19 10:50 PM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 22:03, wrote:


You could always make your own from a lump of hardwood. They're not rocket science, a home made plane can fly.


NT

I have a teak one that my grandfather made, and he died in 1955.
Although it looks as though he bought the metal bits.

John Rumm March 11th 19 11:08 PM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something
to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of
dust everywhere.


Once nice and sharp and well adjusted, there is a certain satisfaction
in a hand plane that you don't get form the powered version.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?


Yup. Probably two in fact. A good general purpose "No 4" or "No 4 and a
half", and a small block plane.

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in
mind, does brand/quality matter that much?


Brans not too much, quality helps. Having said that the cheap chinesium
ones are ok if you spend a bit of time sanding off the rough edges etc,

Its often better to go for an older Stanley or Record from ebay rather
than the new version.

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in
length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed),
what size (length) of plane is best?


No 4 is probably the the nearest to an "all rounder". If you particulat
need to edge joint boards then a slightly longer one might be better -
but they are significantly more expensive.


--
Cheers,

John.

/================================================== ===============\
| Internode Ltd -
http://www.internode.co.uk |
|-----------------------------------------------------------------|
| John Rumm - john(at)internode(dot)co(dot)uk |
\================================================= ================/

Mark March 11th 19 11:51 PM

Manual plane
 
John Rumm wrote:

On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something
to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of
dust everywhere.

Its often better to go for an older Stanley or Record from ebay rather
than the new version.


Agreed loads on ebay under £20
dont feed the Chinise

-

Bill Wright[_3_] March 12th 19 04:31 AM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.


No, they're horrible things. Too much like hard work.

Bill

harry March 12th 19 07:49 AM

Manual plane
 
On Monday, 11 March 2019 18:33:35 UTC, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.


Best place to get one is car boot sale.
You will need training if you haven't used one before.
Or a lot of trial and error.
There are several different types too.

fred[_8_] March 12th 19 08:43 AM

Manual plane
 
On Monday, March 11, 2019 at 6:33:35 PM UTC, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.


My goto for small jobs is a small block plane. Easily handled. Top of the line would be Lie Neilsen with number two, in my opinion, being Veritas.

However there are many cheaper alternatives.

Learn how to sharpen the blade and keep it sharp.

Remember practice makes perfect and thie is true os using a plane more than other tools i.m.e.

Thomas Prufer March 12th 19 09:17 AM

Manual plane
 
On Mon, 11 Mar 2019 11:33:33 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?


First think about *what* you will be planing.

Chipboard will dull a plane very quickly. Nails? Old paint? -- RALI plane with
replaceable blades, TC available ISTR. Beware the price!

Otherwise, get a wooden plane with a wooden wedge, blade with a chip breaker.
Not expensive, used is fine, though "used" may mean that most of the blade is
ground off. Not a problem for occasional use, and more than enough for a quick
smooth. Look at a few youtube videos as to how to adjust it, a few taps and you
can take off paper-thin shavings...

48mm wide, 8" or so is fine. More and it gets expensive, and also bulky.


Thomas Prufer

[email protected] March 12th 19 09:39 AM

Manual plane
 
On 11/03/2019 18:33, wrote:
In common with many on here, I have a lot of DIY toys and in particular, power tools. Over the years I've acquired drills (corded, cordless combi & SDS, pillar), sanders (ordital, rotary, belt), router, circular saw, jigsaw, electric plane etc.

What I notice is that there are many jobs too small/unimportant to break out the serious gear, or create the associated mess. This applies particularly to woodworking, when cutting bits and pieces to cobble together into something useful that doesn't need to be pretty. However, while the appearance doesn't matter for such things, it still annoys me to see crappy, wobbly edges (e.g. cut with a jigsaw, when a circular saw would be the proper tool).

In a nutshell, I'm thinking about getting a manual plane; something to make a rough edge cut flat and smooth, without throwing clouds of dust everywhere.

The first question, then, is: should I buy one new?

The second question is: for a given size and with the use I have in mind, does brand/quality matter that much?

The third question is: for shaving wood in the range 1ft to 3ft in length and typically no more than an inch wide (edge to be planed), what size (length) of plane is best?

Thanks.

Bill.

As others have said, either a Stanley #4 or a block plane. You'll also
need a means of sharpening the blade: an oil stone (or one of the modern
alternatives), a means of holding the correct angle, and a grinder for
when you damage the edge.
These people have some nice tools that are cheaper than Lie Nelson
https://www.workshopheaven.com/ - I've been pleased with the things I've
bought from them (no connection, etc.) If you buy used then make sure
the sole is flat and the iron is ground correctly - the Web has several
useful guides on plane fettling.
Planing is one of the most enjoyable actions in a workshop. The feel of
a sharp blade smoothly cutting, the smell of the wood, the satisfaction
of the smooth surface ...


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