woodworking plans hand plane

woodworking plans hand plane

hey everybody this is clean phil wanted. i wanted to show bazzatron the thickness planingjig that i used in the bread cooling rack video but i'm sure there's a few other peoplethere that want to see this. i can't take credit for the design i got itfrom a guy named paul sellers. but i'm sure that that design is much older. it is just a 'u' shaped thing. two boards on the side screwed in. screwed in. and i have a little stop blockat the end which should be, if you're gonna do this don't use pine for it find a hardwood.

the next thing you need to do, is you needto rip off a piece of stock. if i put these together this is 3/4 of aninch wide minus my saw kerf. this is a quarter of an inch the entire way down. i planned this by hand i did use a digitalcaliper to know this part is equal to this part here here here here. they are all equal. i did it by hand and it really didn't takethat long so once you get use to planing by hand and you're using a marking gauge you'reprobably not necessarily going to need something like this.

the width that this is happens to be the widthof my plane. you can see there is a little bit of wiggleroom and those so i can easily slide it but not much more. reason i want that is because right here andright herethe body of the plane continues around the blade. that means if i keep this plane going in astraight line over and over and over i'll be cutting here but i can never cut here andi can never cut there. that means the body of this plane can nevergo below whats holding up this edge and whats holding up this edge.

this is also how most shooting boards work. so you dimensionalize the piece you rippedoff to a quarter of an inch, or whatever dimension you're looking for. and i just used superglueput it in the corner and put the piece down in there and hold onto it. the glue was taking too long, i ate my lunchand i came back out so i'm just gonna use double sided tape! now, this does add thicknesswhich is why using glue is probably a better option. i'm gonna purposefully be aweful at this! sure i am.

no i actually am. um this is the piece i'm using probably notin focus there. the marking gauge is right here and the markinggauge line is over here. its almost down to it here, its really thickhere. its definitely thicker over here so i definitelydid saw crooked. and thats ok. there is a knott right here and and a branch steeplething going on here. that is actually bowing it this way. and thatwas, when i was doing things for the cooling rack pushing up the end down here. make sure, if you make this, make the bottomflat and even.

another thing that i was running into is thatthis piece will move around left and right. so you may want to figure out some kind ofwedging system to hold it. more in place. i did something like this for a while. but plane goes in here and we start planing. the other thing is you'll get all kinds ofdebris in here get a brush get it out. there's that edge from the marking gauge thatwhole thing just popped off at once so that means this entire thing is down the same level. it's not down to the bottom of my markingguage but it is down to the same level.

that is a quarter of and inch. that is a quarter of an inch. that's a quarter inch. that's a quarter of an inch. everywhere along there is a quarter of aninch thick. and good thing is, especially if this is superglue, but ah, we'll try thisout here, yeah, you can pop these right back out. yup. these come right back out and you canput in any other dimensions that you'd want to.

i wanted all this out here because i was gonnamake really, i wanna make really long pieces that are all quarter of an inch thick or so. so i will be removing this stop that i havedown at the end. and i'm going to try to do this... take these two pieces i'm gonna findan angle here and loosely screw them in. and ah, what thatll do, this is the same widthas this. and i'll screw them in down here so this will free move like this. ok . that way i can put in different sizestock and the shelf liner bottom should be able to come down here and hold onto it withlight pressure. that's my hand moving.

but with light pressure this block will beable to hold a really long piece like thisfrom moving forward. hopefully that gives you an idea of whatsgoing on with this jig. i'll try to find the other ones and like tothat guy who's makes the adjustable one cause, his is actually pretty slick. and ah, i knowrenaissance woodworking is making one as well i'm not sure if he's putting up a video ofit or not. but i'm sure he'll have some where on hiswebsite his version of it. and this is the simplest of the designs that i've seen so far. but there ya go that's whats going on withthis.

i hope ah i hope everybody is having a good day. especially you bazzatron.

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