Chipbreaker success - Printable Version +- Woodnet Forums (https://forums.woodnet.net) +-- Thread: Chipbreaker success (/showthread.php?tid=6447692) Pages:
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Re: Chipbreaker success - CedarSlayer - 07-24-2013 I learned how to use a chip breaker on a Japanese Plane way before I figured out how to do it on a Western Plane. Here are my tips and methods. To test for proper contact, after sharpening the blade I will use a permanent marker on the back edge of the blade. I will then hold the chipbreaker down just before the edge of the blade and shift it forward. If this process takes off a smooth line of the marker, I know that the chipbreaker and blade are tuned to make solid contact near the edge. My own process for fine tuning the gap, is to use a flat, smooth scraped, not sanded block of cedar to adjust the chip breaker. I will use a cutting gauge to make a light line in the cedar. with the blade edge in the cut line, I will push down the chip breaker and secure it in place. to adjust the gap, I may angle the blade and chip breaker. This method is mostly fool proof, which is why I use it. I use cedar because it is soft but not too soft. this can be done without scoring a line, but the line lets me reproduce the same gap on multiple sharpenings. Bob Re: Chipbreaker success - cputnam - 07-24-2013 Quote: Bravo! An object lesson in effective communication. Thank you. Re: Chipbreaker success - Gregory of Sherwood Forest - 07-24-2013 CedarSlayer said: I like that! Re: Chipbreaker success - Skewdge - 07-24-2013 CedarSlayer said: Hi Bob thanks for sharing your method. It sounds like a nice trick. I hope i am not asking a dumb question, do you do all of that when the blade and the chip are in the dai? Do you have any pictures or would you be able to take some and demonstrate? I am interested in learning how the cp technique can be done in Japanese planes. Steve, thanks for the link. Most good woodworking classes are always held either on the East coast or in California. Re: Chipbreaker success - CedarSlayer - 07-24-2013 Early on, when adjusting a plane by hammer was hard, I decided to face learning to adjust dead on. If the plane blade got even slightly dull, I took it out and stropped it. This forced me to learn to adjust. Since then I still strop or sharpen at the first chance. The easiest to practice on was actually a Hong Kong Style, because of the screw together chip breaker and blade. The one I have I think of as Japanese, but really it is a Hong Kong style. Probably a Mujingfang, My bad. When I adjust this one I can do it the way I described. I use it the most since I hate to use up my Japanese blades doing rough work. I keep them for finishing or fine finishing. If the blade and the chipbreaker are not joined together with a screw, then you have to adjust them both by taping. this is still pretty easy. Light taps do the job, if you go too far you tap the back of the plane body till the blade is even with the sole of the plane and then tap the blade back into place. For me this almost always puts the chipbreaker where I want it. This is not automatic the way it is with the screw held chipbreaker, but it is still pretty easy. For me, Japanese Planes seem to 'learn' where you want the blade. It could be my skill, but I don't think so. I think that when you plane with it in the right position, you wear a comfort zone into the dai that makes it easier to return the plane to that position. Bob Re: Chipbreaker success - Steve Friedman - 07-24-2013 CedarSlayer said: Thanks, that's brilliant, but simple. Never would have thought of that. I will definitely try it! Steve Re: Chipbreaker success - Steve Friedman - 07-24-2013 Skewdge said: Except when they're in Iowa, Ohio, Kentucky, Indiana, or Minnesota. But I get your point - I agree that there don't seem to be many in Texas. Isn't there a school in Waco? Steve Re: Chipbreaker success - Wilbur Pan - 07-24-2013 Hank Knight in SC said: To be honest, I usually use my Japanese planes without the chipbreaker, or with the chipbreaker set so far back that it doesn't do anything besides look good. I had mentioned that there are many other ways of dealing with tearout besides using a chipbreaker. I usually take the higher bed angle route. I have a Japanese plane with a bed angle of 45º instead of the usual 40º that most Japanese planes are set at, and if I have a board that is giving me problems, that's what I use. That plane has a chipbreaker as well, and I don't use it. Re: Chipbreaker success - Wilbur Pan - 07-24-2013 Gregory of Sherwood Forest said: My feeling is that you want the shaving to be just short of an accordion. There's nothing wrong with the shaving being like an accordion. It's just that one other effect of putting the chipbreaker closer is that it will make the plane harder to push, so if you get an accordion shaving, you're probably making the plane a little harder to use than it needs to be. In the end, it's not what the shaving looks like, it's what the planed surface looks like. Re: Chipbreaker success - Wilbur Pan - 07-24-2013 Steve Friedman said: I'm not Wilbur, but assume he went to the class at Peters Valley in NJ. Here's the teaching schedule for the instructor - looks like it's just east coast: Mokuchi [/blockquote] Yup. Peters Valley. It was a great time. |