What is it about the 4 1/2 smoother?
#31
About 10+ years ago one in mint condition was worth $130 and fudge were asking more, not anymore; that's what drove me to  buy a LN, which at the time was somewhere around $260 or so.  That guy is using the "book", whichever book that might be, and he's wrong on value unless he had the box and all the paperwork, etc.  He'll keep lugging it around for some time at that price.  True retail for something like that is somewhere around $75-$90, depending on condition.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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#32
My goodness.  The rusty Sargent 4-1/2 (with nearly used up Berg cutting iron) that I picked up a couple of years ago for $12 must be quite the bargain, then.

Still haven't gotten around to cleaning it up; too many distractions.
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#33
Oh, they are out there, more common than #8s, #5 1/2s and #2s, but condition is key to value.  I passed on two different #4 1/2s (one $45, one $40) in the last ten days as both were rustbuckets and would need a lot of work to get back into shape.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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#34
To answer your question about why would someone spend..................This Sellers guy speaks very highly of them. A lot of his followers will spend obscene money to get what he likes, same as The Schwarz, and many of the other hand too gurus.


The Schwarz is frequently accused of buying up all of the XYZ he can afford, do a big write up about them, and then sell them off on Flea Bay just slowly enough to make them look rare. Possibly it's true, and writing doesn't pay as much as tool flipping :-)
Worst thing they can do is cook ya and eat ya

GW
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#35
(11-09-2016, 06:12 PM)Steve N Wrote: The Schwarz is frequently accused of buying up all of the XYZ he can afford, do a big write up about them, and then sell them off on Flea Bay just slowly enough to make them look rare. Possibly it's true, and writing doesn't pay as much as tool flipping :-)

This I seriously doubt.
Credo Elvem ipsum etiam vivere
Non impediti ratione cogitationis
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#36

Laugh
Laugh   That's a good point Steve.  I guess in every woodworker, there is financial entrepreneur.
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#37
In my case, it's sure buried deep. He said as he prepares a list for a trip to Lee Valley.
A man of foolish pursuits
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#38
(Yesterday, 08:12 pm)Steve N Wrote:
The Schwarz is frequently accused of buying up all of the XYZ he can afford, do a big write up about them, and then sell them off on Flea Bay just slowly enough to make them look rare. Possibly it's true, and writing doesn't pay as much as tool flipping :-)



Having met the man, and having been a recipient of his extreme generosity, this statement couldn't be further from the truth (whether made in jest or not). If anything, Schwarz would buy up something on the cheap that he deemed a necessity and then give them all away to budding woodworkers once they became too rich.
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#39
The best of the oldies is the Keen Kutter K4 1/2. Same plane as the Bedrock 604 1/2 round side, cheaper in price. The one thing I have found is the really old ones, about the turn of the century, tended to be lighter in weight

[Image: DSC02860_zpsivevneli.jpg]

[Image: DSC02865_zpsvxdhqezr.jpg]

[Image: DSC02867_zps7yku6nvo.jpg]

Tom
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#40
On that tangent....   Thin Keen Kutter casting?   No problems!   Kentucky Khrome (JB Weld) and some thin bar-stock rescued this Bedrock Keen Kutter of mine:

<img src="http://i32.photobucket.com/albums/d38/C66RUPPEL/Cold_Weld_zpsndcqub5a.jpg" border="0" alt=" photo Cold_Weld_zpsndcqub5a.jpg"/>
Chris
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