Favorite Tool Friday
Posted: Fri Jul 01, 2016 3:35 pm
Yesterday I received my shipment of wood for my next two projects, and included was a free sample - a set of archtop sides in highly flamed maple that had significant tearout from the planing process. I measured the sides and the tearout, and decided it would probably clear at around .120", a lot thicker than I need for a side. So I took it outside and proceeded to try to find a way to thin it down quickly and easily without a thickness sander (I have one that I made for thicknessing sides, but it is cobbled on my drill press, and is neither quick nor easy). None of my planes felt like they could cut this wood, my planer just made more tearout, and then I remembered I had a plane for tough, nasty wood. I pulled it out, set it up, and it took 50 thou off that side, and almost cleared the tearout, in less than 5 minutes. My new favorite tool!
What is it? A beech wood bodied toothing plane, made probably over a century ago by Robert Sorby of Sheffield, England, still in business. It's a small bodied plane, 6" long, with a very thick 2" wide iron bedded at 65 degrees to the bottom. The top of the iron is toothed with fine serrations, so the edge is grooved. Designed for toothing veneer prior to gluing, it's considered a step between a plane and a scraper. It produces a coarse dust rather than shavings, and proves itself to be the bee's knees for roughing obnoxiously grained maple, that's for sure! The surface left is very rough but level and true, so a few passes with a scraper brings it smooth.
A nice page on toothing planes https://anthonyhaycabinetmaker.wordpres ... -our-time/
What is it? A beech wood bodied toothing plane, made probably over a century ago by Robert Sorby of Sheffield, England, still in business. It's a small bodied plane, 6" long, with a very thick 2" wide iron bedded at 65 degrees to the bottom. The top of the iron is toothed with fine serrations, so the edge is grooved. Designed for toothing veneer prior to gluing, it's considered a step between a plane and a scraper. It produces a coarse dust rather than shavings, and proves itself to be the bee's knees for roughing obnoxiously grained maple, that's for sure! The surface left is very rough but level and true, so a few passes with a scraper brings it smooth.
A nice page on toothing planes https://anthonyhaycabinetmaker.wordpres ... -our-time/