Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
![]() |
|
Woodworking (rec.woodworking) Discussion forum covering all aspects of working with wood. All levels of expertise are encouraged to particiapte. |
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
Now that I have a small collection of handplanes, I need to make my
bench a little more planing friendly. Currently I use my vise and benchdogs to hold a piece of wood to be planed. However, because I built the bench before I fell in love with handtools, the benchdog holes are not in the right place and I find my self not tall enough a lot. Anyway I thought I might add a mechanism to clamp a wood stop across it lengthways. Not too difficult. Then someone told me about Japanese trestle beams. A search of rec.woodworking didn't reveal any pictures. It did reveal that there's a chapter in Landis' "The Workbench Book" but I'm not going to buy a book just for 13 pages I may not even build. I also learned that Fine Woodworking issue #54 (9/01/1985) has an article "Body Mechanics and the Japanese Beams" by Drew Langston. I go to the FWW home page and try to get that issue (for $3.50) but they don't seem to archive back that far. Popular Woodworking also had an article in issue #35 (2/1/1987). Bob Bench Page shows one but somehow I don't think master Japanese woodworkers use something like that.... http://www.terraclavis.com/bws/benches.htm fourth picture down. So does anyone in this group have a picture, plans, etc.? Does anyone have opinions about these beams/benches? My intuition says that a bench about knee high with someway to hold planks down would be perfect for planing and not take up a lot of room. Perfect to complement my current imperfect bench. |