Hi everyone, I recently watched a great vid. on YT on how to set up a Stanley #4. It was very long - nearly 2 hours! but afterwards I felt I really understood a lot of about the process.
The guy used a piece of granite as the bed for dressing all the sundry parts and I set about seeing if I could find a similar piece. My local stone workers simply said "Help Yourself, mate - we put all our off cuts in a skip outside the yard!" so now I've got a piece about 6" wide by a couple of feet long and I've spent a couple of hours over the last few evenings dismantling the plane, dressing the parts as advised, and reassembling it. It now cuts like a a razor!
I've read a few threads on the subject of granite pieces and their flatness and a lot of the discussion can seem to get bogged down on how exactly level offcuts of granite actually are... I'm not sure I see how relevant that sort of endless, is it - or isn't it - to'ing and fro'ing is when the subject of the discussion is sharpening your tools, 'cos the proof of this particular pudding is that for me, an amateur, and an inept amatuer, at that! I now have for the first time ever, a super-effective plane!
So the Top Tip is: if you need something to help you sharpen your planes and chisels, simply ask your local stone workers and see if they have the same sort of arrangements for disposing of their off-cuts as mine do!
The guy used a piece of granite as the bed for dressing all the sundry parts and I set about seeing if I could find a similar piece. My local stone workers simply said "Help Yourself, mate - we put all our off cuts in a skip outside the yard!" so now I've got a piece about 6" wide by a couple of feet long and I've spent a couple of hours over the last few evenings dismantling the plane, dressing the parts as advised, and reassembling it. It now cuts like a a razor!
I've read a few threads on the subject of granite pieces and their flatness and a lot of the discussion can seem to get bogged down on how exactly level offcuts of granite actually are... I'm not sure I see how relevant that sort of endless, is it - or isn't it - to'ing and fro'ing is when the subject of the discussion is sharpening your tools, 'cos the proof of this particular pudding is that for me, an amateur, and an inept amatuer, at that! I now have for the first time ever, a super-effective plane!
So the Top Tip is: if you need something to help you sharpen your planes and chisels, simply ask your local stone workers and see if they have the same sort of arrangements for disposing of their off-cuts as mine do!