11-05-2016, 12:08 PM
Yesterday I goofed. As I get older this happens more frequently. I turned a #5 jack into a scrub plane. It was rough customer, it made a Stanley Handyman look like a Norris infill. On the blade it said Wadsworth Tool, Allemagne .I think Allemagne is Germany in French, but it been a long time since high school and I was very,very, poor French student. The frog beds and seats were cast at angles, those four angles had no relation to each other, so I milled them to produce a standard 45 degrees. Yesterday it was it's turn, so I looked up scrub plane blade radius, 3", and then found a 3" diameter lid. Now I have a sharp blade with 1 1/2" radius.
I guess I'll continue down this path. Since some cap irons and frogs are a matching pair , these were. Now I'm wondering about the cap-iron. If I leave the cap-iron at the corners I have a huge projection. To grind a similar radius I would have to grind away the hump then the cap iron would be too short. Does this mean I have to make or modify a cap iron?
BTW, while digging in the parts bin , a crude Footprint #5 jack, think a step below Stanley Handyman, generously volunteered to become another scrub plane. It doesn't have any wood, I made 3 into 2 jacks for my sons, and it was parts.
The only problem about being retired is you get old and stupid, at least you have time to do things twice.
I guess I'll continue down this path. Since some cap irons and frogs are a matching pair , these were. Now I'm wondering about the cap-iron. If I leave the cap-iron at the corners I have a huge projection. To grind a similar radius I would have to grind away the hump then the cap iron would be too short. Does this mean I have to make or modify a cap iron?
BTW, while digging in the parts bin , a crude Footprint #5 jack, think a step below Stanley Handyman, generously volunteered to become another scrub plane. It doesn't have any wood, I made 3 into 2 jacks for my sons, and it was parts.
The only problem about being retired is you get old and stupid, at least you have time to do things twice.
A man of foolish pursuits