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Working with Handplanes

SKU# 070810

Advice On Choosing, Tuning, Sharpening, and Using This Classic Handtool

From the editors of Fine Woodworking

Paperback

$17.95

Availability: In Stock

Details
  • Product # 070810
  • Type Paperback
  • ISBN 978-1-56158-748-3
  • Published Date 2005
  • Dimensions 8-1/2 x 10-7/8
  • Pages 160
  • Photos color photos
  • Drawings and drawings
With a sharp, well-tuned handplane you can quickly adjust the fit of parts or joints, flatten a panel or produce a glass-smooth surface for finishing. But learning to use this classic handtool can be something of a challenge. This book offers advice on how to choose handplanes and tune and sharpen them for top performance. There is also in-depth information on specialty planes and spokeshaves.

Whats inside:
  • Choosing the right bench planes
  • Flattening wide panels
  • Planing difficult grain
  • Making and using a shooting board
  • Using rabbet planes
  • Tuning up a spokeshave
  • Making wooden planes
THE NEW BEST OF FINE WOODWORKING series collects the best articles from recent issues of Fine Woodworking magazine. Organized by topic and fully indexed, these books make it easy to access the best woodworking ideas and information straight from the experts.
Table of Contents
Introduction

1. Bench Planes
Making Music with a Plane
Straight Talk About Planes
Four Planes That Earn Their Keep
Three Bench Planes
Users Guide to Block Planes

2. Planing Techniques
Flattening Wide Panels by Hand
Planing Difficult Grain
Planing Corner Joints
Chamfers
Shooting Board Aims for Accuracy
Shooting Boards Aim for Tight Joints

3. Specialty Planes
Rabbet Planes Are Real Shop Workhorses
Compass Planes
The Stanley No. 55: King of Combination Planes
Japanese Planes Demystified

4. Spokeshaves
The Spokeshave
Soup Up Your Spokeshave

5. Scrapers
The Scraper Can Replace a Stack of Sandpaper
Cabinet Scrapers
The Buckhorn Scraper
Making Small Scrapers

6. Making Planes and Scratch Stocks
Wooden Planes
Wooden Chisel Plane
Simple Tools Can Reproduce Most Moldings
Scratch Stocks
Make a Wooden Scraper

Credits

Index

Introduction
My first handplane almost ended my interest in woodworking. To say it was useless is an understatement. It did not plane. It hacked. I wasnt sure whether to fault the tool or the user.

I replaced the handplane with a belt sander, which performed well straight out of the box and saved my interest in woodworking. Although my skills were still primitive, the sander allowed me to complete some projects and they did not look hand hewn.

A few years later, the notion of handplaning wood resurfaced. Determined to succeed, I took a class that devoted the first several sessions to simply flattening and sharpening the plane iron. Hours and hours of labor later, my hands stained black from fine steel and abrasive particles, I was rewarded with a shockingly sharp iron -- so sharp, in fact, that it effortlessly shaved the hair on the back of my hand.

After I performed countless other tweaks to the body of the plane, I put it to wood. It performed well, slicing wood with a satisfying whish. The time spent on the tune-up was well worth it.

Woodworkers have many choices today when it comes to handplanes. The finest ones work well right out of the box. But all require maintenance eventually. Whether you have some older, lesser quality tools in need of a tune-up or simply want to get the most out of quality handplanes, the articles in this book, taken from the pages of Fine Woodworking magazine, will ensure your success. Soon you will realize why handplanes are among the most pleasing of all woodworking tools to use.

-- Anatole Burkin
editor of Fine Woodworking
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