11-30-2017, 08:39 PM
In recent project downtime, I've been catching up on some shop maintenance. I buttressed the legs on my "Rubbo-legged" junk bench, changed my vise-jaw faces, etc. I also had a small coffin-plane which needed tuning.
I have become a real fan of using the chip-breaker, and not so much a tight mouth. For this woodie, the tight mouth was jamming with shavings, quite frustrating. I found my wide chisel to be the right size to start opening things:
Here's a bottom view as the opening got to be about right to flow. This happens to be a holm oak base, which I love
Now trying it out on a ripply piece of cherry, the chips are flowing pretty good, and the finish is good:
For the 'beauty shot', the plane really swooshes a shaving of sassafras:
Happy woodworking,
Chris
I have become a real fan of using the chip-breaker, and not so much a tight mouth. For this woodie, the tight mouth was jamming with shavings, quite frustrating. I found my wide chisel to be the right size to start opening things:
Here's a bottom view as the opening got to be about right to flow. This happens to be a holm oak base, which I love
Now trying it out on a ripply piece of cherry, the chips are flowing pretty good, and the finish is good:
For the 'beauty shot', the plane really swooshes a shaving of sassafras:
Happy woodworking,
Chris
Chris