So first the gloat. I made my first bad ass mortice and tenon joint
today. Bad ass meaning perfect, square, tight, ya know perfect.
Considering the mortice was through three inches of african teak, three
inches in length, and using my inch reg mortice chisel I am pretty
happy with the whole affair.
So the question. I think a big chunk of the success of this joint is
due to my new fancy Lie Nelson Rabbet Block Plane. It rocks, and is on
sale at woodcraft this month. So finally the question, when I tighten
down on the brass screw to lock the blade in place it frequently skews
off the the side. It seems to be square ground, so I am thinking that
it isn't intentional. Am I wrong about that? I am able to get it to
line up straight but it takes quite a bit of playing around, something
I wasn't expecting. Is this user error? User ignorance? Or something
afoul with my new toy?
Thanks
Looks like you are having a hard time getting an answer. I wish
somebody would reply, as I'm interested in that plane and getting it on
sale, but not if its got those kinds of adjustment problems. I have a
Lee Valley small block plane that does not have any of the symptoms you
describe.
Of course it doesn't have the blade that goes all the way to the sides
either - nice feature.
Bob
Tattooed and Dusty wrote:
> ...
>
> So the question. I think a big chunk of the success of this joint is
> due to my new fancy Lie Nelson Rabbet Block Plane. It rocks,
Lapping the sole might help to fix that...
> and is on
> sale at woodcraft this month. So finally the question, when I tighten
> down on the brass screw to lock the blade in place it frequently
skews
> off the the side. ...
You might try putting brass shim between the screw and the blade.
--
FF
[email protected] wrote:
>
> Lapping the sole might help to fix that...
>
Lapping the sole might help with what? I did lap the sole, quite well
in fact, but I don't see how the sold could have anything to do with
the question being asked???
I think I was over tightening the brass screw, though even so it seems
to drift a little bit. From looking at the problem it seems to me that
the notch in the blade that beds with the screw that sets the depth
might be out of square with the blade. Or maybe it should be out of
square more or something like that. Meaning I think the notch and the
blade ride parallel to each other, and when tightened that is somewhat
off.
Or something along those lines.
Tattooed and Dusty wrote:
> [email protected] wrote:
>
> > Tattooed and Dusty wrote:
> > > ... It rocks,
>
> > Lapping the sole might help to fix that...
> >
>
> Lapping the sole might help with what?
It might help stop the plane from rocking.
--
FF
PS (I should have used a smiley!)
Tattooed and Dusty wrote:
> So it seems there is a misunderstanding due to the vagueries of local
> dialectical variances.
>
> I was saying the plane rocks. As in is real sweet. Like I am into it.
> Not rocks as a rocking horse rocks.
>
> The problem is with the blade adjustment, otherwise a great little
> plane.
I still think I should have used a smiley.
--
FF
You may be getting carried away with tightening. The wheel is large, so it
is easy to overtighten the lock screw.
From the point of just snug enough to hold the blade in place turn the wheel
an additional 1/4 to 1/2 turn. See if that causes the blade to skew
significantly.
"Tattooed and Dusty" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> So first the gloat. I made my first bad ass mortice and tenon joint
> today. Bad ass meaning perfect, square, tight, ya know perfect.
> Considering the mortice was through three inches of african teak, three
> inches in length, and using my inch reg mortice chisel I am pretty
> happy with the whole affair.
>
> So the question. I think a big chunk of the success of this joint is
> due to my new fancy Lie Nelson Rabbet Block Plane. It rocks, and is on
> sale at woodcraft this month. So finally the question, when I tighten
> down on the brass screw to lock the blade in place it frequently skews
> off the the side. It seems to be square ground, so I am thinking that
> it isn't intentional. Am I wrong about that? I am able to get it to
> line up straight but it takes quite a bit of playing around, something
> I wasn't expecting. Is this user error? User ignorance? Or something
> afoul with my new toy?
>
> Thanks
>