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Rehabbing Woodies

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Rehabbing Woodies

#1

Rehabbing Woodies

Bob Smalser, Seabeck, WA

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In previous articles, I described rehabbing older Bailey-pattern planes acquired from Ebay to replace all the family�s ancient wood planes�the ones I�m getting tired of inlaying mouths in every decade or so as they wear. I�ll rehab these oldies one more time and pass them on to my oldest boy who�s interested in luthier work�he�ll be the 5th generation of craftsman for some of these.


From left to right is a Stanley transitional jack, a Stanley 36 razee smoother, and an old Ohio Tool coffin smoother. The jack and the coffin smoother have new soles, and I�ll do the Stanley 36 today. Wood planes are a joy to use�.they have a warm feel to them and for a boatbuilder or shipwright working overhead, are lighter and handier than cast iron planes. They wear faster, but are much easier to tune. As the sole wears unevenly from planing edges and odd shapes, a simple pass through or over a fine-set hand or power jointer flattens them back into true. Do that three or four times over the course of a decade, however, and the mouth widens to the point where fine shavings are no longer possible. If you look at the Stanley 36, you can see the mouth is a bit wider than the one on your favorite cast-iron smoother.

The front of the plane wears the fastest, and repeated jointings on a plane used for coarse work makes them wedge-shaped, eventually. I could inlay a patch or throat piece into the front section of the mouth, but that does nothing to correct the wedge shape, the mortises are time-consuming to cut, and a throat piece doesn�t support the critical area at the front edge of the mouth as does the original sole and throat. So instead, I prefer to attach new soles and recut the throat to the original specifications or even a bit narrower in the mouth, depending on how I intend to use the plane.

Any straight-grained hardwood will do�these original plane bodies are beech, and I�m using hard Bigleaf Maple for the new soles today. I also use holly and Madrone, more hard local woods. How thick should the new sole be? Thicker than the furthest downward the iron can be adjusted. Because I�m using the power jointer for this, I mill the new sole stock almost twice as thick as needed. For the Stanley 36 in relatively good condition, no taper is needed to correct wedge-shaped wear, so I plane my sole stock flat.


I power joint the beech plane body to expose fresh wood uncontaminated by oil and wax, and glue the sole stock on with 5:1 West System epoxy dyed brown. Get the free Gougeon Brother�s epoxy pamphlet from West Marine and follow the instructions�including the use of a high-strength thickener. A good boatbuilder�s epoxy is moisture proof, is almost twice as strong and flexible as other glues and is the best choice. Clamping isn�t required�.I merely place the glued assembly on a wax-papered flat surface and set a cast-iron plane atop for weight over night.


Then I simply trim the oversize sole flush using card scrapers. Notice I also filled the worn corners on the plane body with thickened epoxy to make a smooth surface that won�t catch on something during use.


I clamp the plane to a flat, smooth surface and recut the throat from the throat side of the plane. The rear of the throat is a 45-degree angle and the front bevel of the throat needed to clear shavings is about 20 degrees in the opposite direction. I merely index the chisels against the plane body and tap and pare.


I continue to remove wedge-shaped waste until the back of the throat and the front of the throat meet�


�in a nice, clean �V� at the bottom of my over-thick sole stock.


Then cutting the mouth is simply a matter of jointing the new sole-plane body on a sharp, well-tuned jointer set to remove a 64th or so until the mouth appears and develops into the width desired.

Contnued....

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#2

Woodies Part II

Bob Smalser, Seabeck, WA

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The mouth and throat are cleaned with fine mill files�


�and the plane assembled. Insure the frog is aligned accurately with the throat in the plane body using a straight edge�


�and make that cap lever screw is tight�a source of chatter as the blade dulls in use. To adjust the blade, I merely set the plane on a flat board and adjust the iron to drop until it barely touches the board�then I lock everything in and lightly tap my final set with a brass hammer just like I do any other wood plane. Just don�t exceed the limits of the adjuster�s slop and you�ll not damage the plane.


Then I tweak the adjustments while planing a flat piece of hardwood like this figured Bigleaf Maple until I consistently get fine shavings that are near the full width of the blade. That�s about as good as it gets. Now I can dismantle the plane if I desire and finish the wood with stain, oil and wax.

Sharpening the blade and tuning the cap iron are covered in my articles on rehabbing cast iron planes:

http://www.cianperez.com/Wood/WoodDocs/Wood_How_To/Smalser_on_RehabbingPlanes.htm

http://media5.hypernet.com/ubb/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=009153

http://media5.hypernet.com/ubb/ultimatebb.php?ubb=get_topic;f=1;t=008638

PS�want to also hide all that ugly glueline so nobody will know you�ve been there? Read this:

http://media5.hypernet.com/cgi-bin/UBB/ultimatebb.cgi?ubb=get_topic&f=1&t=009010&p=

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#3

Re: Woodies Part II

Bob Hackett

>Bob,

With Dunbar`s book out of print and no follow-up being talked about I`m seeing a book here that can easily be the new "go to" book for neanderthals.Your style of writing and clear pictures are bound to be a hit with any editor worth his salt.You should really consider gathering all these posts together and going to see someone.

Mainely,Bob

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#4

Re: Woodies Part II

janderr

>i'll second this!

having learned the techniques of woodworking from my library i feel confident in saying that your instruction is clear, concise, and instills a confidence that i too can pull it off.

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#5

Thanks! Great work!

Brad in Ottawa

>Bob,

These are really great articles... easy guides that inspire us to get out and use what we've got!

Thanks!

Brad

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#6

Sort of a Legacy

Jeff Aldred

>Bob:

I am sure that I am not the only one that thinks its a priviledge to be reading (and saving) these articles from a 5th generation woodworker.

I would second the book, or booklet idea, if not for us, at least for your family.

Thank you very much.

Jeff

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#7

Roger that!

Greg B�tit, Vergennes, VT

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Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#8

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

Skip in Falls Church

>Hi Bob,

What a great post on rehabbing the soles on wood planes although, truth to tell, I had just come upstairs to compliment you on another post you made a while back on making handles for socket chisels.

I have a several old socket chisels that need new handles. I made a prototype but was unsure of exactly what to do when inserting the handle into the socket. So I did a search on the boards here and refound your post on rehandling chisels. I got what I was looking for but found a time saver in your post as well. I had been simply planing my handle stock square - which works, but takes a bit of time per handle. (I'm working with oval shaped stock - okay, a sledge hammer handle. :) ) I saw your use of a draw knife and a light went on - I have a draw knife that I got recently, I just didn't think to use it. Wow, does that work fast!

Skip

Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#9

I agree, too! These have been great!

Jonathan Kaplan (OR)

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Re: Rehabbing Woodies

#10

I would buy a copy!

Don Thompson, Cutler Ridge, South of Miami FL

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