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Puckdropper

12/10/2016 7:37 PM

Hand Plane Tune/Rebuild

Last night, I followed the advice of this fellow with a #4 Stanley. I
actually did it in reverse order, but the results were the same. That #4
Stanley cuts fantastically and *easily*. I was surprised how easy it was
to push through the piece of pine I had nearby. Listening to it cut, the
note it sings is quite a bit higher than it was before.

https://thechristiantoolcabinet.wordpress.com/2013/04/25/minimal-bench-
plane-tuning/

Mating the frog and the plane body was the tedious part, I actually had to
remove quite a bit of material to get the front of the frog to sit firmly
on the body. I guess I could have shimmed the front of the frog, but I
didn't think about that last night. When I got done, the frog screws were
bottoming out before they secured the frog so I had to install a couple
shim washers.

One thing I did that he didn't mention was I put a few drops of oil on the
adjustment screw threads and the yoke. That made the action SO much
smoother.

Puckdropper


This topic has 2 replies

Sc

Sonny

in reply to Puckdropper on 12/10/2016 7:37 PM

12/10/2016 2:22 PM

On Wednesday, October 12, 2016 at 2:37:44 PM UTC-5, nor.. wrote:
> Last night, I followed the advice of this fellow with a #4 Stanley. I
> actually did it in reverse order, but the results were the same. That #4
> Stanley cuts fantastically and *easily*. I was surprised how easy it was
> to push through the piece of pine I had nearby. Listening to it cut, the
> note it sings is quite a bit higher than it was before.
>
> https://thechristiantoolcabinet.wordpress.com/2013/04/25/minimal-bench-
> plane-tuning/
>
> Mating the frog and the plane body was the tedious part, ....
> Puckdropper

I use hand planes often and they're in pretty good shape. I didn't know to fine tune the frog-to-body fit. I will from now on. Thanks for posting the link.

Sonny

Mm

Michael

in reply to Puckdropper on 12/10/2016 7:37 PM

12/10/2016 1:21 PM

On Wednesday, October 12, 2016 at 2:37:44 PM UTC-5, [email protected] wrote:
> Last night, I followed the advice of this fellow with a #4 Stanley. I
> actually did it in reverse order, but the results were the same. That #4
> Stanley cuts fantastically and *easily*. I was surprised how easy it was
> to push through the piece of pine I had nearby. Listening to it cut, the
> note it sings is quite a bit higher than it was before.
>
> https://thechristiantoolcabinet.wordpress.com/2013/04/25/minimal-bench-
> plane-tuning/
>
> Mating the frog and the plane body was the tedious part, I actually had to
> remove quite a bit of material to get the front of the frog to sit firmly
> on the body. I guess I could have shimmed the front of the frog, but I
> didn't think about that last night. When I got done, the frog screws were
> bottoming out before they secured the frog so I had to install a couple
> shim washers.
>
> One thing I did that he didn't mention was I put a few drops of oil on the
> adjustment screw threads and the yoke. That made the action SO much
> smoother.
>
> Puckdropper

That some beautiful work. My hand planes get a little on the rusty side as time goes by, even when I occasionally wipe them down with rag sprayed with anti-rust. That's a great tip about keeping a magnet handy. I'll use that one.

Mike


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