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Bill February 28th 10 08:44 PM

Emulating Scrub Plane
 
When I was at the WoodWorking Show, someone from LN/V showed me how
to emulate a scrub plane. He was using a Low-angled plane with a blade that
appeared to be ground with a lot of camber. Now I'm asking myself whether
it would be
helpful for it to be "dished" as well--or wouldn't that matter because of
the amount
of camber? I intend to try the same idea with my #5 Jack plane (comments
welcome--please!).
Intuitively, making the blade iron "dished" means removing more metal which
seems bad.

Bill



John Grossbohlin[_2_] February 28th 10 08:59 PM

Emulating Scrub Plane
 

"Bill" wrote in message
...
When I was at the WoodWorking Show, someone from LN/V showed me how
to emulate a scrub plane. He was using a Low-angled plane with a blade
that
appeared to be ground with a lot of camber. Now I'm asking myself whether
it would be
helpful for it to be "dished" as well--or wouldn't that matter because of
the amount
of camber? I intend to try the same idea with my #5 Jack plane (comments
welcome--please!).
Intuitively, making the blade iron "dished" means removing more metal
which seems bad.


A jack with a fair amount of camber in the iron and an open mouth would have
been the starting place for board preparation in centuries past.... then a
jointer and then a smoother. The scrub is a relatively recent development!

John


Father Haskell February 28th 10 09:22 PM

Emulating Scrub Plane
 
On Feb 28, 3:44*pm, "Bill" wrote:
When I was at the WoodWorking Show, someone from LN/V showed me how
to emulate a scrub plane. *He was using a Low-angled plane with a blade that
appeared to be ground with a lot of camber. *Now I'm asking myself whether
it would be
helpful for it to be "dished" as well--or wouldn't that matter because of
the amount
of camber? *I intend to try the same idea with my #5 Jack plane (comments
welcome--please!).
Intuitively, making the blade iron "dished" means removing more metal which
seems bad.

Bill


Crowning the edge works well enough. Additional advantage is,
when the narrow working part of the edge is dull, tilting the iron
brings a sharp edge back into play.

The 5 will make a good scrub once you set the frog back.

Bill February 28th 10 10:17 PM

Emulating Scrub Plane
 

"Father Haskell" wrote in message
...
On Feb 28, 3:44 pm, "Bill" wrote:
When I was at the WoodWorking Show, someone from LN/V showed me how
to emulate a scrub plane. He was using a Low-angled plane with a blade
that
appeared to be ground with a lot of camber. Now I'm asking myself whether
it would be
helpful for it to be "dished" as well--or wouldn't that matter because of
the amount
of camber? I intend to try the same idea with my #5 Jack plane (comments
welcome--please!).
Intuitively, making the blade iron "dished" means removing more metal
which
seems bad.

Bill


Crowning the edge works well enough. Additional advantage is,
when the narrow working part of the edge is dull, tilting the iron
brings a sharp edge back into play.

The 5 will make a good scrub once you set the frog back.
____________


Thank you very much! And John Grossbohlin, thank you for the brief history
lesson--I'm
doomed to repeat it! ; )

Bill




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