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Hand plane question -please help?
Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's
1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? Lowes is the only box store I've found that offers hand planes, but '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... Thanks in advance for your advice! Fred |
Hand plane question -please help?
I had to do a fair amount of practice on sacrificial wood before my skills were
up to taking a panel rough to finish with a hand plane. Even now I'd be challenged to do it with a single plane. And there's been a lot of sharpening and tuning to learn besides. Typically I start with a scrub plane (stanley 40) then to a jointer (stanley 7) and then to a wide smoother (stanley 4 1/2). Though a jack plane (stanley 5) would be the plane that could do it all but it would be more work and take more skill. I'd suggest you belt sand your countertop. Then contemplate your opening of the pandora's box of handplaning. David In article , Fred says... Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's 1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? Lowes is the only box store I've found that offers hand planes, but '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... Thanks in advance for your advice! Fred |
Hand plane question -please help?
For about $20 a lumberyard will and it for you. Unless you don't care how
it looks, that has to be the best solution. |
Hand plane question -please help?
"Fred" wrote in message
om... Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's 1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? Lowes is the only box store I've found that offers hand planes, but '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... Thanks in advance for your advice! Fred I'll throw in another vote for sending it out. I recently completed a 33x60 cherry table top and took it to my local hardwood supplier to be sanded. They did the sanding for $8. todd |
Hand plane question -please help?
Fred wrote:
I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... I almost hate to ask. Where do you live and how much time/money are you willing to spend on this. A #4 is a smoother, not long enough to flatten items of any length very well. If it's a HF plane and it isn't tuned, consider it a funny looking scrub plane. Using a plane isn't something you're going to just pick up in an afternoon. Finding a #6 or #7,already tuned and sharpened, unless you're willing to spend some nice change isn't going to happen in an afternoon either. Take a moment to go to http://www.supertool.com/StanleyBG/stan1.htm and read that page, it'll help some, but the physical part of the learning and acquiring will still need to be done. So wil coming up with the money for this addiction. DAMHIKT. Minty and usable off the shelf planes can be had, but the cost will make the lumber look like pocket change. A wide belt sander at a cabinet shop or millwork shop is probably your best bet if you eed it done right and now. Save getting the planes for later. Dave in Fairfax -- reply-to doesn't work use: daveldr at att dot net American Association of Woodturners http://www.woodturner.org Capital Area Woodturners http://www.capwoodturners.org/ |
Hand plane question -please help?
I'll throw in another vote for sending it out. I recently completed a
33x60 cherry table top and took it to my local hardwood supplier to be sanded. They did the sanding for $8. $8! Great price; I would have expected $25 at least. |
Hand plane question -please help?
"John" wrote in message
... I'll throw in another vote for sending it out. I recently completed a 33x60 cherry table top and took it to my local hardwood supplier to be sanded. They did the sanding for $8. $8! Great price; I would have expected $25 at least. No kidding. For me, it's the only way to go. There may have been a caveat that the original material was purchased there, but heck, even if it was twice that much it would have been worth it to me. todd |
Hand plane question -please help?
"Fred" wrote in message om... Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's 1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? Lowes is the only box store I've found that offers hand planes, but '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... Thanks in advance for your advice! Fred Well Fred, I'm going to go against the grain on this one. Fortunately for me, I didn't ask before buying a Stanley jack plane, putting a good edge on the blade and laying it on a hunk of Walnut I wanted to build something with. Yeah - I had to fool around a bit with it to get a perfect cut, but it really wasn't rocket science. Nor was it a lot of work to put an edge on the blade. Sharpened it, put it back together, used it a bit, discovered the adjustment that makes the blade perfectly parallel to the slot, and then it was just a matter of going back and forth. Did I miss some of the esoteric aspects of properly handplaning? Most likely, but in no time flat I ended up with a flat piece of Walnut that was as smooth as a baby's behind. Isn't that what you're after? If you've got half a woodworking sense about you, then go for it - and by the way, my Stanley cost me $45.00 retail. -- -Mike- |
Hand plane question -please help?
On 11 Jun 2004 10:09:36 -0700, (Fred) wrote:
Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's 1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. Start here http://www.amgron.clara.net/planingp...planeindex.htm You really need some assistance here. Find a nearby woodworker and borrow a couple of planes that are already tuned up and ready to go. Find a power thicknesser / surface planer that can take this width, then splash out on a cheap Stanley #80 scraper to take the machining marks off. Find a commercial shop with a wide belt machine. Or the long way, read up on Scary Sharp (Google) and plane tuning. Take your Harbor Freight special (or buy it a cheap 50 yar old friend from eBay), tune it up, practice on some scrap, then go to it. -- Smert' spamionam |
Hand plane question -please help?
Maple is prone to tearout. You will probably have trouble planing it,
especially if the grain in one board goes in a different direction than the adjacent board. I would find someone with a wide belt sander to do it for you, or if you are good with a hand belt sander, there is a technique to sanding to keep the panel pretty flat. Another method would be using a cabinet scraper followed by a ROS. Typically, if you use a handplane for difficult wood, the included angle of the iron is typically 50°-60° as opposed to the typical 45° of most handplanes. Preston "Fred" wrote in message om... Hello, I'm working with a solid wood countertop for a vanity -it's 1-1/8 x 18" x 28". I've glues up 3 boards to make this, and now want to plane it flat. I only have one hand plane, and it's a cheap one from harbor freight. Seeing as how I spend $45 on this lumber, I'd really like to avoid mistakes. Would you kind folks please offer me some suggestions on which type of plane I need to flatten this? Lowes is the only box store I've found that offers hand planes, but '#4' doesn't mean anything to me.... Thanks in advance for your advice! Fred |
Hand plane question -please help?
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THANKS FOR THE ADVICE!!
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