• Hi all and welcome to TheWoodHaven2 brought into the 21st Century, kicking and screaming! We all have Alasdair to thank for the vast bulk of the heavy lifting to get us here, no more so than me because he's taken away a huge burden of responsibility from my shoulders and brought us to this new shiny home, with all your previous content (hopefully) still intact! Please peruse and feed back. There is still plenty to do, like changing the colour scheme, adding the banner graphic, tweaking the odd setting here and there so I have added a new thread in the 'Technical Issues, Bugs and Feature Requests' forum for you to add any issues you find, any missing settings or just anything you'd like to see added/removed from the feature set that Xenforo offers. We will get to everything over the coming weeks so please be patient, but add anything at all to the thread I mention above and we promise to get to them over the next few days/weeks/months. In the meantime, please enjoy!

A Plane

Tiresias

Nordic Pine
Joined
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When I was in the Faroes, in the Tjóðsavnið there were a few tools relating to boat building (faroese fishing boats - 4 to 12 oars, one or two mini masts, double prowed).

And I came across this (rubbish photo'. Through glass, and I can see the reason, but sometimes they take the low lighting to an extreme).

DSC05571.jpg

The one on the bottom left reminded me of something I made a while back, And since Dr Al. has slightly snarkily asked for a WiP on my planes I've pulled this back from my archives. It did appear briefly on the other place, but is no longer there.

Horned Plane

So, I started with a piece of firewood. I cannot guarantee that this is exactly the piece, as I put a few aside to dry, but it was similar. Sycamore, I think, that is what we normally get from our log man if it isn’t birch. And this isn’t birch. I have burnt enough of that in Sweden to know (or think I do).

Horned Plane 1.jpg

A sweaty hour or so later with a saw and plane, and we have a blank.

Horned Plane 2.jpg

And then, a dextrous bit of drilling later, two halves with dowels for alignment, marked to cut out the throat.

Horned Plane 3.jpg

Now, I could have sworn I had some photographs of the glue up. But… Being a bear of little brain I hadn’t realised quite how much dowels will swell when you put PVA on them. What was ‘a nice tight, tap with a mallet and it’s snug’ fit became a ‘ *$%^*£, ^&”£$%^*, why, why, why, won’t you close up you %%&(&£’ fit. Every clamp I have (both of them) was used, and a Workmate, both tightened with extension bars. Plus whacking the merry hell out of the blighter with a big hammer. Imagine one of the apes out of 2001.
However, eventually.

Horned Plane 4.jpg

And breathe.

Last lap, the handle and wedge. This is part of the stump of a very old espalliered plum or bullace. Splits all over the place, but I thought I had enough material. And I did, sort of. A bit of a pig to saw though, and curiously, smells of toast whilst so doing.

Horned Plane 5.jpg

So here we have a blank for the wedge.

Horned Plane 6.jpg

And here, after a bit of shaving , is how it fits in the body of the plane. I now had something that could cut. And, God damme, it actually did.

Horned Plane 7.jpg

The handle (or horn I suppose. No sniggering at the back) was shaped with a rasp and sandpaper. And here I made a mistake. Not the first, mind you. Because I was so uncertain about whether I had enough material, I did more of the shaping on the handle than I should have. So it was a right swine to clamp up with the curved surfaces. Several lengths of twine and tourniquets proved to be effective, with quite a lot of padding.

Horned Plane 8.jpg

Finally I shaped the wedge. I’m not entirely sure this is necessary in practice – I know the intent behind the cutout &c., but it really didn’t seem to make that much difference to the shavings for this sort of plane.

Horned Plane 9.jpg

And, eventually, if you have borne with me over the length of this extended and no doubt tiresome description, we have the finished product. BLO and paste wax.

Horned Plane 10.jpg

And this is my next project. Another lump of syacamore, and a plane iron that started in the 'weeg, went to Sydney, and came back to me. Thanks, bro.

DSC05537.jpg
 
While I feel I should apologise for the snarkiness, it produced this WIP, so it was obviously worth it :lol:

I thoroughly enjoyed reading that, thanks for sharing. Nice (sorry Malc) looking plane too.

:text-bravo:
 
Surely no hand plane build WIP is complete without a few near transparent wafer thin shavings to prove it's efficacy. ;) :)
 
Andyp":3auh27s4 said:
Surely no hand plane build WIP is complete without a few near transparent wafer thin shavings to prove it's efficacy. ;) :)

You're just doing this to annoy me, aren't you?

DSC04401.jpg

DSC04403.jpg

And since it is a roughing plane, I have since opened the mouth, and put a much bigger camber on the iron.

Just wanted to see how good I could get it before I started adapting it.
 
Definitely a silk purse from a sow's ear! I love the look of the light and dark woods.

But what about all the other potential planes in your firewood pile that just go up in smoke? Don't they deserve to be rescued too?! ;)
 
AndyT":24aegeau said:
....Don't they deserve to be rescued too?! ;)

Now that's just plain cruel !! :lol:

Beautiful workmanship, Tiresias
 
Really good thank you, thought you were going to say you hadn’t cut a groove up the dowels which then forced the glue to emerge though the end grain of the piece of wood.
Now you wouldn’t imagine it that it has ever happened to me would you? Lol!
 
I like that and especially that it's come from scrap wood, very nice indeed. :eusa-clap:

I'm part way through making another plane but cheated as I bought an old bronze casting though hadn't realised it would take me two full days to sand it down to a flat surface. I hope I can get shavings like yours when finished or it will be just a shiny ornament. :eusa-doh:
 
Thank you for the comments. You’ve all been very kind (imagine that in the voice of Jeremy Hardy as the Laird – if you don’t know Hamish and Dougal that reference will be as opaque as two non-transparent things in a pod).

And the suggestion that there are more planes to be released from the wood store is just unhelpful. I already have more planes that any rational being could need (™my partner). However, I do have a few more dried blanks stashed away for, erm… emergencies.

Now the smoothing plane I am doing at the moment will have either a metal plate in front of the mouth, or, and this is what I’m thinking about, a full metal sole (little known sequel to Kubrik’s Full Metal Jacket, inexplicably less popular in the cinema). Does anyone know if sycamore has the same reaction with steel as oak? Or do I have to go full brass?
 
Sycamore should be fine with steel as it's reasonably benign as long as it's well dried of course.

If you're thinking about a steel sole why don't you go the whole hog and make it with dovetailed steel / brass sole and sides, your sycamore can still be used as the infill. it's not that much work, honestly :eusa-liar: - just sayin. :lol:

My wife also asks how many plane does a bloke need? My reply is usually along the lines of "have you counted your shoes lately dear?" Always when I'm at a safe distance of course ;)
 
I thought the answer to how many planes do you “need” is n+1, where n is the number you currently have!
 
Weekend_Woodworker":202ek8zg said:
I thought the answer to how many planes do you “need” is n+1, where n is the number you currently have!

Yebbut maths isn't her strong point. ;)
 
Weekend_Woodworker":21agsokl said:
I thought the answer to how many planes do you “need” is n+1, where n is the number you currently have!

No, no.....that's bikes.

I have more planes than I need so that I can give them away. Which means I need them. I gave one to a friend's son the other day, after making him sharpen it a couple of times for practice. I still have the right number of planes.

Nice work, Tiresias. Well done.
 
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