Alexy, the yoke is the wishbone looking piece that slides over the
depth adjustment knob. It is responsible for raising and lowering the
blade.
Jonesy
alexy wrote:
> "Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
> >Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
> >held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
> >Thanks,
> >Jonesy
>
> Not sure what you are calling a "yoke", but I'm guessing it is the
> tote, the tallish handle at the rear that you hold with your dominant
> hand while pushing the plane. I have at least 1 that I have glued back
> together and reinstalled, and had no problem with. You can get
> replacement totes at Highland hardware among other places. Or it is
> easy (and rewarding) to carve your own--going not for an exact replica
> or a work of art, but rather comfort in your hand.
> --
> Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently.
Jonesy wrote:
> I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
> Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
> held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
It's not a big deal. Make sure the frog is well supported and backed
and use a punch to drive out the pin. The new yoke will come with a
new pin.
R
Thanks Joe for the website, very helpful. I think this is the part that
I'm looking for 12-005-22 "Y" Adjusting Lever & Pin but I will double
check. Who is Lori?
Jonesy
Joe Gorman wrote:
> Jonesy wrote:
> > I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
> > Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
> > held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
> > Thanks,
> > Jonesy
> >
> Yes, someone here has done so and should chime in soon. A list pf parts
> is available
> http://stores.stanleytools.com/Planes/Bench%20Planes/No.%205%20USA/
> but I'm not sure which part to tell you to order.
> You will break the frog if you try to punch out the retaining pin if you
> don't support it properly. I'd call Lori at 1-800-262-2161.
> Joe
alexy wrote:
> "Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> >Alexy, the yoke is the wishbone looking piece that slides over the
> >depth adjustment knob. It is responsible for raising and lowering the
> >blade.
>
> Doh!
>
> I was racking my brain trying to figure out what part of a plane
> operated like a yoke, and never thought of that. And now that you say
> it, I wonder why it wasn't completely obvious.
>
> Well, no help from this quarter on that one, although you might look
> at the plane repair kits from highland hardware. Don't know if they
> include that part.
>
Their $26.99 kit has it. Stanley sells the y-lever and pin separately
for $1.00. The quality is not what it used to be, dunno about the
quality of the parts in the Highland kits.
--
FF
I order the y lever from stanely for a buck. I'm a woodshop teacher on
a fixed budget and had to fix about 5 of them. Hopefully this is a
cheap fix. Thanks for all your input.
[email protected] wrote:
> alexy wrote:
> > "Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
> >
> > >Alexy, the yoke is the wishbone looking piece that slides over the
> > >depth adjustment knob. It is responsible for raising and lowering the
> > >blade.
> >
> > Doh!
> >
> > I was racking my brain trying to figure out what part of a plane
> > operated like a yoke, and never thought of that. And now that you say
> > it, I wonder why it wasn't completely obvious.
> >
> > Well, no help from this quarter on that one, although you might look
> > at the plane repair kits from highland hardware. Don't know if they
> > include that part.
> >
>
> Their $26.99 kit has it. Stanley sells the y-lever and pin separately
> for $1.00. The quality is not what it used to be, dunno about the
> quality of the parts in the Highland kits.
>
> --
>
> FF
Jonesy wrote:
> I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
> Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
> held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
> Thanks,
> Jonesy
>
Yes, someone here has done so and should chime in soon. A list pf parts
is available
http://stores.stanleytools.com/Planes/Bench%20Planes/No.%205%20USA/
but I'm not sure which part to tell you to order.
You will break the frog if you try to punch out the retaining pin if you
don't support it properly. I'd call Lori at 1-800-262-2161.
Joe
Jonesy wrote:
> Thanks Joe for the website, very helpful. I think this is the part that
> I'm looking for 12-005-22 "Y" Adjusting Lever & Pin but I will double
> check. Who is Lori?
>
> Jonesy
>
> Joe Gorman wrote:
>> Jonesy wrote:
>>> I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
>>> Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
>>> held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>>> Thanks,
>>> Jonesy
>>>
>> Yes, someone here has done so and should chime in soon. A list pf parts
>> is available
>> http://stores.stanleytools.com/Planes/Bench%20Planes/No.%205%20USA/
>> but I'm not sure which part to tell you to order.
>> You will break the frog if you try to punch out the retaining pin if you
>> don't support it properly. I'd call Lori at 1-800-262-2161.
>> Joe
>
Lori is the lady who handles repair parts. Or so I've gathered from
reading here. Haven't called yet but I picked up a 78 in fair shape but
missing fence, depth gage and spur so it's on my to do list.
Joe
"Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
>Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
>held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>Thanks,
>Jonesy
Not sure what you are calling a "yoke", but I'm guessing it is the
tote, the tallish handle at the rear that you hold with your dominant
hand while pushing the plane. I have at least 1 that I have glued back
together and reinstalled, and had no problem with. You can get
replacement totes at Highland hardware among other places. Or it is
easy (and rewarding) to carve your own--going not for an exact replica
or a work of art, but rather comfort in your hand.
--
Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently.
"Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>Alexy, the yoke is the wishbone looking piece that slides over the
>depth adjustment knob. It is responsible for raising and lowering the
>blade.
Doh!
I was racking my brain trying to figure out what part of a plane
operated like a yoke, and never thought of that. And now that you say
it, I wonder why it wasn't completely obvious.
Well, no help from this quarter on that one, although you might look
at the plane repair kits from highland hardware. Don't know if they
include that part.
Alex
>
>Jonesy
>
>alexy wrote:
>> "Jonesy" <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>> >I have several #5 jack planes where the yoke is broken...split apart.
>> >Is it possible to replace the yoke fairly easily? I see that they are
>> >held in place by a pin. Any thoughts would be appreciated.
>> >Thanks,
>> >Jonesy
>>
>> Not sure what you are calling a "yoke", but I'm guessing it is the
>> tote, the tallish handle at the rear that you hold with your dominant
>> hand while pushing the plane. I have at least 1 that I have glued back
>> together and reinstalled, and had no problem with. You can get
>> replacement totes at Highland hardware among other places. Or it is
>> easy (and rewarding) to carve your own--going not for an exact replica
>> or a work of art, but rather comfort in your hand.
>> --
>> Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently.
--
Alex -- Replace "nospam" with "mail" to reply by email. Checked infrequently.