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135830 "Robert Fortier" <Robert.Fortier@S...> 2004‑08‑12 RE: making a scrub plane...
Well, for my scrub plane, I took a very very modern Stanley #4 (first plane
I was given) and put a camber on the blade. It works like a charm and leave
the smoothing job for nicer example of #4 I have

My two cents

Bob in rainy Sherbrooke, Province of Québec

-----Message d'origine-----
De : John Lederer [mailto:john@j...]
Envoyé : 12 août, 2004 15:38
À : oldtools
Cc : oldtools
Objet : Re: [oldtools] making a scrub plane...

I think  I am idiosyncratic on this,  but for what it is worth:

My wooden scrub planes have arced  blade ends, but they also are rounded
on the edges of the sole and to a lesser degree across the sole.  Think
of the bottom of the plane being like the cross section of a banister rail.

This is functional.  By tilting the plane you can change the amount of
bite the blade takes.  It works naturally and well. Beats fiddling with
the plane in the middle of a scrub job.

I did not make them that way.  They came that way.  Crazy
German-Norwegian-Swedish-Finnish in our area.

A couple have a rounded "hoof" on top of the plane to put your hand on.
Without that, gloves are necessary for scrubbing.

Regards,
John Lederer
Oregon, Wisconsin

Michael Campbell wrote:

>I picked up a cheap woodie coffin-type plane a bit ago and am
>considering making it into a scrub.
>
>How does one grind the camber into the iron?  It's, naturally, ground
>straight right now.  I'm not above using electrons for this, but is it
>sufficient for a scrub to mark the curve I want, then freehand it on
>the grinder, then sharpen?  Seems it would be, but wanted to get some
>more learned opinions.
>
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