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Camber or straight? - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Camber or straight? (/showthread.php?tid=7343526) |
Camber or straight? - Elijah A. - 10-08-2018 I have no 7 jointer plane that I want to use for joining edges and flattening faces. Should I slightly camber or just use a straight blade? Thx! Eli RE: Camber or straight? - bandit571 - 10-08-2018 Straight...with barely a hint at the corners of a curve... [attachment=13583] Stanley No. 7c, type 9...with the OEM iron.. [attachment=13584] Works for me..... RE: Camber or straight? - Elijah A. - 10-08-2018 Great, thanks so much! RE: Camber or straight? - hbmcc - 10-08-2018 For strictly jointing (edges) you can get away with a straight blade cutting edge. However, most say--I agree--to provide a slight arc to the cutting edge so edges can be offset to level out angled surfaces; and to make face planing functional, without trenching. I don't consider using a jointer on a face the final surfacing, but only to knock off high points. I have never intentionally honed a straight cutting edge. My shallowest arcs can easily trench a wood surface. Then listen to the French I spout. Those are only on a #4 finish plane. RE: Camber or straight? - adamcherubini - 10-08-2018 Any plane that works wide surfaces and doesn’t cut joints should have a curved iron. The extent of curvature is up to you. I think my smoother has the least curvature. RE: Camber or straight? - Aram - 10-08-2018 (10-08-2018, 10:04 PM)adamcherubini Wrote: Any plane that works wide surfaces and doesn’t cut joints should have a curved iron. The extent of curvature is up to you. I think my smoother has the least curvature. Hi Adam, Can you say what your reasoning is? Thanks, much appreciated. RE: Camber or straight? - Handplanesandmore - 10-08-2018 Like Bandit571, I do not put a camber on any blade other than may be a touch of slight wear on the corners as I press down on them in my last few honing strokes, with the intention of avoiding plane tracks. If you intend to use your #7 as a shooting plane, do not camber it! If you plan to use a bench plane as a scrub plane, a camber (plus opening up the mouth) will be needed. Cambered blade or not, a plane can deliver the same results as long as you know to use it. For instance, Paul Sellers and Rob Cosman don't camber theirs, while David Charlesworth does. Simon RE: Camber or straight? - Derek Cohen - 10-09-2018 Elijah, the only time you want a straight blade on a jointer is if you match plane two edges together. If you joint edges individually, a camber aids in steering the high spots. It also aids in avoiding tracking on the faces of boards. You could always have two blades, one of each ![]() Regards from Perth Derek RE: Camber or straight? - Elijah A. - 10-09-2018 Thank you all very much! RE: Camber or straight? - ZachDillinger - 10-09-2018 I agree with the others. A trying plane should have a small amount of curvature, ideally it would leave roughly the same signature as your smoothing plane which will help you avoid having to smooth plane the entire face. |