Alright this is the sort of beginner's guide I was hoping to find. I purchased a plane on a whim, and couldn't figure out how to get it to cut without jamming and not cutting, or why none of the dial adjustments did not increase the cut. Didn't want to disassemble everything without a clue in the world. It's the explanation of moving parts that really made it make sense, instead of the too complicated breakdowns.
If it makes you feel any better I disassembled my brand new hand plane, sharpened the blade to a mirror edge... then promptly failed to do anything but chew the wood to pieces. Been trying for 3 days to figure out why, what I did wrong, been searching TH-cam and still couldn't figure it out because according to _what I could see_ in the videos I found it should be fine. Stumbled across this one in a fit of annoyance that it still wasn't performing properly, and at precisely the 2:21 mark realized that my problem was I had put the blade in backward and not a single other video showed the reassembly process clearly enough for me to notice.
I clicked this video because I recently inherited a large hand plane and small block plane when my grandmother passed away. The planes belonged to my grandfather who had passed 25yrs prior, and have been sitting in his shop since then, so they're in need of attention. I was quite surprised when I reached the part where you described the history of your planes. This video seems to be a perfect introduction to getting them back into working condition. Thanks!
Just got my first hand plane and have been watching a bunch of videos that are way too long. I learned more from your video than any others I've watched. Thank you.
Honest, straightforward procedure for setting up a plane. Answered every one of my questions way better than the Stanley instructions and a couple of yt videos. Thanks.
We recently lumbered a 36" maple, a 36" white ash, and a 32" pecan. After drying, we tried planing with a Rigid (Home Depot) 13" planer with 2 HSS knives th-cam.com/users/postUgkxIzvvTi3_Qc8JnVdYYRJCvuoDC4QjTzeL . This job was clearly too much for that machine. The pecan was particularly difficult, due to heavy mineral deposits, and a sharp pair of HSS knives would be consumed by a mere 3 boards. We were also having lots of problems from chip bruising, due to poor dust collection. The shavings came off like straw and jammed in the 4" hose.We bought the DW735 simply to be able to run carbide blades, which worked brilliantly for the pecan. However, we found it to be a much, MUCH nicer machine. It was far more rigid than the "Rigid" planer, and far more accurate as well. But what I liked most about it was the dust feed. This machine has its own blower, which shreds the "straw" like shavings as they come off the cutting head and helps boost the shavings into the dust collection system. No more clogs! It's also nicely sealed so that the internals stay quite clean. This is just a well tempered machine that's a delight to use. It literally cut the labor in half. Just another example of getting what you pay for.
I just bought my first hand plane and it is identical to the number 4 of yours. Here in Australia it is branded "Craftright 225mm Bench Plane" and costed me 25 AUD. Without any experience I tried to set it up, but discovered it is not so simple (for a newbie like me). I found your explanation very clear and because you used the model identical to mine it has been very fortunate to me. Liked and subscribed.
I've watched a number of videos on bench plane setup... each one has bits and pieces done well, but yours is the first I've seen that outlines the entire process "bullet point" style. I bought my first plane today, a new Stanley No5... your video will really help me get started.
Thank you for this. It's succinct and to the point (I've watched so many videos that take forever to tell you very little of what you really want to know). Cheers.
Great info. Never thought of wax on the plane bottom. Just restored a rusty bench plane with vinegar and steal wool. Coated with light oil but the wax made a big difference. Thanks for showing this old dog a new trick.
Thanks. Really helpful. This is the kind of stuff that makes TH-cam so useful sometimes. I've had an old plane [also grandad inheritance] in my tools collection for a couple of years and never used it, because I wasn't sure how to properly set it up. "I bet someone on TH-cam could show me." I thought. And sure enough...
Thanks for the advice Keith. Just bought and renovated a Stanley No 6 and had been wondering how to change the blade in the mouth to make the gap wider, now i know. Cheers mate
Best vid I've seen yet on adjusting a hand plane, bar none. Even better than the master himself - Paul Sellers; who's videos I watch religiously. Sorry Mr. Sellers! Thank you for this. Excellent job and completely useful information.
I acquired a old Plane from a friend it was in a poor state but after seeing this video ,I manage to set up and now it's doing a pretty good job, Thankyou, Now I need to sort my chisels.
I am new to this at 63 years young. Thanks for the video. I have two old ones from my father in law, a sargent and one smaller one without a name. I suspect they are antiques.
That was really useful, straightforward, comprehensive... and no complicated or expensive ideas... thank you... I’m going into my shed to reform my planes today!!
I found this to be extremely useful. I've learned every other skill but wood work. Wood and construction is my newest interest. And this video helped me restore my grandfather's planer and properly set my cheap harbor freight variety ones to dead on.
Thank you! I'd just taken my plane apart to sharpen...didn't realize 1: I'd put the iron back together backwards and 2: The frog had ended up getting shifted soo far forward it just kept clogging. Now I'm getting some nice shavings and can continue the project for my father!
for years, with very infrequent use, i thought i was using my planes correctly, and just sucked at them. For the first time, i now understand how to adjust them for proper use, which i will be trying in a few mins. I just ordered the guide, and have several stones (im a knife guy). Thanks so much, as i see now i had no idea what i was doing before watching this.
Just wanted to drop a thankyou, I followed you step by step and just turned a 15 quid Rolson bench plane into a quality tool. I'm gonna make myself some nicer timber handles for it and it'll be a nice piece of kit now
I bought a Stanley #3 last year and I used it for the first time today. My new favorite tool now, and your video was the first one that went straight to the point instead if an hour long lecture that scared me away from it. Thank you very much sir.
Understood every step made simple. Good work and well-lighted video. My plane is exactly like your grandfather's-only named Bailey. Patent dated April 19, 1910. Thanks for showing how to sharpen and set a wood plane.
Very good video. I repaired an old smoothing plane I bought over thirty years ago and now get a great clean cut and that really satisfying swooooosh sound as I plane!
Great job! I bought a download on how to rehab a handplane by Christopher Schwartz, the Jimi Hendix of handplanes, and followed it to a tee, but still couldn't get the plane to cut properly. That's not a criticism of Schwartz, I must've been not adjusted something properly. I watched your video and it solved the problem in a few minutes, it cuts like a dream! Thanks for posting! Mark
Thank you so much i have been searching for a long time for a way to set the blade you were the only one who showed it. I am new to this and honestly i have tried about 93 youtube vids and you were the only one. Thanks again.
Hi , I just wanted to let you know how helpful I found this plane setting tutorial to be. I have been messing around with my stanley bailey for months. Now it works fine, even better than I would have hoped for. Most Grateful...
Very useful tips! Just recently been given a block plane and today bought a No 4 from a stall at a steam rally. Handy knowing how to set the plane with its adjustments. Thanx for informative vid clip. Oh yeah, will be getting myself a honing jig now I know what to do.
I was actually just wondering about this the other night. I have 3 hand planes, similar to what you have, but wasn't sure how to setup, sharpen and get them working properly. Thank you for this!
4:40 - Another (more fundamental) cause of jamming is for the chip breaker to "make contact" with the iron away from the chip breaker's front edge. The angle at which its bevel is ground affects this. You want the very, VERY front edge of the breaker to be the first part of it that touches the iron, and when you have that you can put it insanely close to the tip of the iron and you won't get jamming. This is the preferred arrangement when you're setting up the iron for smoothing. If your chip breaker is incorrectly ground and you're getting jams, then you can ALSO alleviate them by opening up the mouth, but that detracts from the quality of your operation for smoothing. To get the breaker ground this way, flatten it in the way the video describes, but hold the back end of the breaker very low - even lower than the surface of your sharpening stones if you can. This removes more material back away from the edge and ensure that material isn't there to make first contact. Anyway, the rule of thumb I've heard is to have the throat about double the shaving thickness you want. So if you want 0.001" shavings, you can go with as little as 0.002" throat. That's a WHOLE HECK of a lot less than 2mm. :-) See Paul Sellers's videos on plane setup for more on this.
For some reason this is the first time I've watched this, but it is very useful and cuts through a lot of the confusing guff you get from other sites. I will sort my plane out in a few days and let you know how I get on.
I've been watching your videos for a few months now after recently getting into woodworking. Today I received an old Stanley no.4 plane on eBay and after honing the blade and following the steps in this video it's now working like a dream! Can't wait to use it on the next project. Great work on your videos, I really enjoy watching them and have learnt a lot. Keep it up!
Excellent and Actionable content; so thanks for that; I actually had a hard time finding a manual bench plain; every where I went, wanted to sell me an electric one; I had bought a wooden screen door for my workshop from Lowes that is a cut to size screen door. I cut it down with a cordless 10 inch circular saw, and cleaned it up a bit carefully with a belt sander. However, the door still wouldn't close completely and seal, ( I live far and away out in the country, so we are in no short supply of flying and crawling creatures that seem to enjoy finding and messing with whatever current project I am working on, especially if it includes paint work ). So, the seal on the door is important to keep them out. The size I cut the door down to, is just about as close as it can be; however the door frame has an angled step plate at the bottom, so the wooden screen door bottom must meet the correct angle to seal tight; and belt sanders are very efficient, but feathers away, and eats material to fast and it is a challenge to get the angle true all the way across. I found a Kobalt 9 3/4 inch x 2 inch Bench Plain; part # 0118238; which are similar to yours; aside from the quick release latch on top; I have a brass screw instead; but seems like a very solid and sturdy unit. "Many" of the tools made for the last 100 years were "most likely made by IRWIN" no matter what name brand they were sold under; until in 1993, "American" bought out IRWIN, and since then in 2003 "Newell Rubbermaid" bought out American. I also inherited tools from my Grand Father; and unless acquired two generations ago, most all tools are only manufactured by a small handful of companies, and then rebranded. These older tools have held up very well over the years; and it almost seems intentional that newer tools only last so long. Thanks again; very helpful; I have worked with metal most all my life, but started wood working on or about 2017; and find that I like to work with popular wood the best, as it is very strong; hard, but doesn't split or crack easy and the wood grain looks excellent, especially once stained or sealed.
I bought the same plane that you demonstrated on in the video. Bought it from Harbor Freight and couldn’t get it to work properly. But, thanks to you and your tips that will change.
Thanks for this - I've had a Record plane for years, and when I took it apart to sharpen the cutting iron I couldn't figure out how to set it up again. D'oh! But you break down the process very well and now I've got my plane back in working order, thanks to you. In fact, it's working better now than it did when it was brand new.
sorry to be so offtopic but does any of you know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account..? I somehow lost the login password. I love any tips you can give me.
@Jaziel Tripp I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site thru google and im waiting for the hacking stuff now. Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
Thank you for this straight-to-the-point video. I recently purchased a cheap and poorly made Stanley #5 (looks a lot like your Record). I’ve been flattening the sole, 10 minutes at a time, over the past few days (that is, working it for ten minutes x4 or 5 times each day). I’m glad I started with 80 grit sandpaper! The high spot is straight down the center, and the area around the mouth was also quite high. I’m finally getting close to perfectly flat. It’s been tempting to use a lot of force, but I’m letting the weight of the plane do the work. I hadn’t taken a good look at the knife until today, and it’s filled me with a bit of despair. It’s not straight (the edge is irregular and not at a right angle) when held against a square.
Cheers Mr rag n bone Brown, my no5 hand plane was ok, but not quite right. It was the mouth was too close so I adjusted it and a sharpen up the blade. What a dream to use now. Thank you!
Alright this is the sort of beginner's guide I was hoping to find. I purchased a plane on a whim, and couldn't figure out how to get it to cut without jamming and not cutting, or why none of the dial adjustments did not increase the cut. Didn't want to disassemble everything without a clue in the world. It's the explanation of moving parts that really made it make sense, instead of the too complicated breakdowns.
If it makes you feel any better I disassembled my brand new hand plane, sharpened the blade to a mirror edge... then promptly failed to do anything but chew the wood to pieces. Been trying for 3 days to figure out why, what I did wrong, been searching TH-cam and still couldn't figure it out because according to _what I could see_ in the videos I found it should be fine. Stumbled across this one in a fit of annoyance that it still wasn't performing properly, and at precisely the 2:21 mark realized that my problem was I had put the blade in backward and not a single other video showed the reassembly process clearly enough for me to notice.
@@dudeistpriest787 Ah the joys of old tools.
I clicked this video because I recently inherited a large hand plane and small block plane when my grandmother passed away. The planes belonged to my grandfather who had passed 25yrs prior, and have been sitting in his shop since then, so they're in need of attention. I was quite surprised when I reached the part where you described the history of your planes.
This video seems to be a perfect introduction to getting them back into working condition. Thanks!
All the necessary information without unnecessary explanation. Thank you
No waste of time at all. Straight to the point. Everything one needs to know about a wood plane is here in this video! Thanks a lot!
Just got my first hand plane and have been watching a bunch of videos that are way too long. I learned more from your video than any others I've watched. Thank you.
Everything I needed to know in one short but very informative video, thankyou!
Brilliant! Have had my dad's plane for years and never knew how to set it up. Now I do.
Clearest and most concise video on setting up hand planes that I've seen. Thank you.
Glad it was helpful!
great straight-forward steps. Thank you
Fantastic! This is the absolute BEST video I've seen on setting up a hand plane. Thank you kindly, sir!!!
Honest, straightforward procedure for setting up a plane. Answered every one of my questions way better than the Stanley instructions and a couple of yt videos. Thanks.
Finally, a decent straight to the point guide. Thank you!
We recently lumbered a 36" maple, a 36" white ash, and a 32" pecan. After drying, we tried planing with a Rigid (Home Depot) 13" planer with 2 HSS knives th-cam.com/users/postUgkxIzvvTi3_Qc8JnVdYYRJCvuoDC4QjTzeL . This job was clearly too much for that machine. The pecan was particularly difficult, due to heavy mineral deposits, and a sharp pair of HSS knives would be consumed by a mere 3 boards. We were also having lots of problems from chip bruising, due to poor dust collection. The shavings came off like straw and jammed in the 4" hose.We bought the DW735 simply to be able to run carbide blades, which worked brilliantly for the pecan. However, we found it to be a much, MUCH nicer machine. It was far more rigid than the "Rigid" planer, and far more accurate as well. But what I liked most about it was the dust feed. This machine has its own blower, which shreds the "straw" like shavings as they come off the cutting head and helps boost the shavings into the dust collection system. No more clogs! It's also nicely sealed so that the internals stay quite clean. This is just a well tempered machine that's a delight to use. It literally cut the labor in half. Just another example of getting what you pay for.
I just bought my first hand plane and it is identical to the number 4 of yours. Here in Australia it is branded "Craftright 225mm Bench Plane" and costed me 25 AUD. Without any experience I tried to set it up, but discovered it is not so simple (for a newbie like me). I found your explanation very clear and because you used the model identical to mine it has been very fortunate to me. Liked and subscribed.
What Georgio said... not so simple until you see it done. Thanks from another newbie.. My no. 4 works now!
Same here
I've watched a number of videos on bench plane setup... each one has bits and pieces done well, but yours is the first I've seen that outlines the entire process "bullet point" style. I bought my first plane today, a new Stanley No5... your video will really help me get started.
Thank you for this. It's succinct and to the point (I've watched so many videos that take forever to tell you very little of what you really want to know). Cheers.
good honest instruction, not flash, gets to the point, easy to understand, loved it!
The best and most relocatable piece of plane set up advice I've seen to-date. Well done.
Glad it was helpful!
Great info. Never thought of wax on the plane bottom. Just restored a rusty bench plane with vinegar and steal wool. Coated with light oil but the wax made a big difference. Thanks for showing this old dog a new trick.
Brilliant, I’m very new to woodwork, so thank you for making it easy on an old female person 🤗
Very informative. I never considered the frog and its function. I now will. Thank you so much.
Thanks. Really helpful. This is the kind of stuff that makes TH-cam so useful sometimes.
I've had an old plane [also grandad inheritance] in my tools collection for a couple of years and never used it, because I wasn't sure how to properly set it up. "I bet someone on TH-cam could show me." I thought. And sure enough...
Thanks for the advice Keith. Just bought and renovated a Stanley No 6 and had been wondering how to change the blade in the mouth to make the gap wider, now i know. Cheers mate
This morning I took my cheapest plane, one. It came from a UK general store. I followed your instructions, and now it works a charm.
Best vid I've seen yet on adjusting a hand plane, bar none. Even better than the master himself - Paul Sellers; who's videos I watch religiously. Sorry Mr. Sellers! Thank you for this. Excellent job and completely useful information.
I acquired a old Plane from a friend it was in a poor state but after seeing this video ,I manage to set up and now it's doing a pretty good job, Thankyou, Now I need to sort my chisels.
Thanks soooooo much for this. I'm a hobbyist and you explained much more than I thought there was . Cheers mate and thanks again.
watching you using your well setup planes at the end was worth the watch alone, look at that smooth action, lovely!
I am new to this at 63 years young. Thanks for the video. I have two old ones from my father in law, a sargent and one smaller one without a name. I suspect they are antiques.
Excellent walk-thru. Thank you.
This is the most informative video I have found on this topic. I do a lot of wood carving, but never used a planer. Thank you sir!
Pleasure to watch and learn! Thank you!
That was really useful, straightforward, comprehensive... and no complicated or expensive ideas... thank you... I’m going into my shed to reform my planes today!!
You are an angel I did carpentry 9 years ago in college but didn’t learn these basics thankyou.😘
I found this to be extremely useful. I've learned every other skill but wood work. Wood and construction is my newest interest. And this video helped me restore my grandfather's planer and properly set my cheap harbor freight variety ones to dead on.
I love your rapid delivery style. Thank you.
I have watched several videos on this subject and you done a great job,, really instructive and usefull ,, thanks
Far better than the other guys video on this subject. Good explination and demo.
❤ very interesting information dear friend I love you from Pakistan ❤thank you so much ❤
Thank you! I'd just taken my plane apart to sharpen...didn't realize 1: I'd put the iron back together backwards and 2: The frog had ended up getting shifted soo far forward it just kept clogging. Now I'm getting some nice shavings and can continue the project for my father!
for years, with very infrequent use, i thought i was using my planes correctly, and just sucked at them. For the first time, i now understand how to adjust them for proper use, which i will be trying in a few mins. I just ordered the guide, and have several stones (im a knife guy). Thanks so much, as i see now i had no idea what i was doing before watching this.
Q
Wow
Just wanted to drop a thankyou, I followed you step by step and just turned a 15 quid Rolson bench plane into a quality tool. I'm gonna make myself some nicer timber handles for it and it'll be a nice piece of kit now
excellent presentation on basics of sharpening a plane! THANKS!!
Very well explained .This young chap doesn't have many planes but at least he knows what he is doing .
I bought a Stanley #3 last year and I used it for the first time today. My new favorite tool now, and your video was the first one that went straight to the point instead if an hour long lecture that scared me away from it. Thank you very much sir.
Understood every step made simple. Good work and well-lighted video. My plane is exactly like your grandfather's-only named Bailey. Patent dated April 19, 1910. Thanks for showing how to sharpen and set a wood plane.
Very good video. I repaired an old smoothing plane I bought over thirty years ago and now get a great clean cut and that really satisfying swooooosh sound as I plane!
Great Vid! Had no idea what I was doing. Thanks for the simple and thorough instruction
Thanks for this. A very clear and concise explanation. 👍🏼
THANK YOU! concise without all of the uh, um, and ahhh, of other videos. Not boring like the dull techno dudes.
Thanks for this. We own the same plane so it makes it so much easier
Great job! I bought a download on how to rehab a handplane by Christopher Schwartz, the Jimi Hendix of handplanes, and followed it to a tee, but still couldn't get the plane to cut properly. That's not a criticism of Schwartz, I must've been not adjusted something properly. I watched your video and it solved the problem in a few minutes, it cuts like a dream! Thanks for posting! Mark
Thank you
Thanks!!! This is a wonderfully clear and concise instruction video. Thanks!
Thanks, very informative. Only had my Stanley plane 45 Years and now know how to set it up properly.
great video, tons of useful information with minimal fluff. thank you sir
i love the sharpening process, cant wait to get my own sharpenin stone
A great tutorial video. I found it really useful and easy to follow. Many thanks.
:) I'm loving the fact everything looks like it's being used and no bullshit :) . Good job.
Thank you so much i have been searching for a long time for a way to set the blade you were the only one who showed it. I am new to this and honestly i have tried about 93 youtube vids and you were the only one. Thanks again.
Thanks!
Hi , I just wanted to let you know how helpful I found this plane setting tutorial to be. I have been messing around with my stanley bailey for months. Now it works fine, even better than I would have hoped for. Most Grateful...
One of the most useful videos on TH-cam.... Thanks mate.
Great video, well explained and clear, learnt a lot through watching this.
Thank you this video is the most informative I’ve come across.👍👍👍😇
This is excellent! Exactly the information I was looking for. Great presentation. Thank you so much!
Great tutorial,,,, simple yet tons of info,,,,
Thanks for posting this, very easy to follow, very helpful!
Thank you . This video was very helpful 👍
God bless you for useful information.
Very useful. Just bought my first hand Planer!
What an excellent video. Thank you.
Very useful tips! Just recently been given a block plane and today bought a No 4 from a stall at a steam rally. Handy knowing how to set the plane with its adjustments. Thanx for informative vid clip. Oh yeah, will be getting myself a honing jig now I know what to do.
To be honest, best of help on the web. Thanks.
Just bought my first plane...looks like some kind of alien technology from a distant galaxy!... Video helped me out thanks 👍🏻
Thanks Keith for a really great tutorial for tuning up Planes. I will definitely use this!
+bluecurvedesign nice 👍🏻
I was actually just wondering about this the other night. I have 3 hand planes, similar to what you have, but wasn't sure how to setup, sharpen and get them working properly. Thank you for this!
Old ocean?
I learned everything I needed from this single video. Thank you very much. Liked and subscribed
Awesome video! great for teaching resource thank you!
4:40 - Another (more fundamental) cause of jamming is for the chip breaker to "make contact" with the iron away from the chip breaker's front edge. The angle at which its bevel is ground affects this. You want the very, VERY front edge of the breaker to be the first part of it that touches the iron, and when you have that you can put it insanely close to the tip of the iron and you won't get jamming. This is the preferred arrangement when you're setting up the iron for smoothing. If your chip breaker is incorrectly ground and you're getting jams, then you can ALSO alleviate them by opening up the mouth, but that detracts from the quality of your operation for smoothing.
To get the breaker ground this way, flatten it in the way the video describes, but hold the back end of the breaker very low - even lower than the surface of your sharpening stones if you can. This removes more material back away from the edge and ensure that material isn't there to make first contact. Anyway, the rule of thumb I've heard is to have the throat about double the shaving thickness you want. So if you want 0.001" shavings, you can go with as little as 0.002" throat. That's a WHOLE HECK of a lot less than 2mm. :-) See Paul Sellers's videos on plane setup for more on this.
For some reason this is the first time I've watched this, but it is very useful and cuts through a lot of the confusing guff you get from other sites. I will sort my plane out in a few days and let you know how I get on.
Hey I just noticed.....what a great site as well Thanks Again..
And after planing my door now closes. Thank you sir. Well done video.
Brilliant video as usual. Thanks so much.
Great video. Straight forward and to the point. Thanks!
Thanks.. That was a great run through with the planes
Brilliant video. Exactly what I wanted.
I've been watching your videos for a few months now after recently getting into woodworking. Today I received an old Stanley no.4 plane on eBay and after honing the blade and following the steps in this video it's now working like a dream! Can't wait to use it on the next project. Great work on your videos, I really enjoy watching them and have learnt a lot. Keep it up!
Great to hear 👍
Easy to follow . Very useful
Great video. Very informative, thank you 😊
love this sound when wood paper comes out
Excellent and Actionable content; so thanks for that; I actually had a hard time finding a manual bench plain; every where I went, wanted to sell me an electric one; I had bought a wooden screen door for my workshop from Lowes that is a cut to size screen door. I cut it down with a cordless 10 inch circular saw, and cleaned it up a bit carefully with a belt sander.
However, the door still wouldn't close completely and seal, ( I live far and away out in the country, so we are in no short supply of flying and crawling creatures that seem to enjoy finding and messing with whatever current project I am working on, especially if it includes paint work ). So, the seal on the door is important to keep them out.
The size I cut the door down to, is just about as close as it can be; however the door frame has an angled step plate at the bottom, so the wooden screen door bottom must meet the correct angle to seal tight; and belt sanders are very efficient, but feathers away, and eats material to fast and it is a challenge to get the angle true all the way across.
I found a Kobalt 9 3/4 inch x 2 inch Bench Plain; part # 0118238; which are similar to yours; aside from the quick release latch on top; I have a brass screw instead; but seems like a very solid and sturdy unit.
"Many" of the tools made for the last 100 years were "most likely made by IRWIN" no matter what name brand they were sold under; until in 1993, "American" bought out IRWIN, and since then in 2003 "Newell Rubbermaid" bought out American.
I also inherited tools from my Grand Father; and unless acquired two generations ago, most all tools are only manufactured by a small handful of companies, and then rebranded. These older tools have held up very well over the years; and it almost seems intentional that newer tools only last so long.
Thanks again; very helpful; I have worked with metal most all my life, but started wood working on or about 2017; and find that I like to work with popular wood the best, as it is very strong; hard, but doesn't split or crack easy and the wood grain looks excellent, especially once stained or sealed.
Got my 1st plane yesterday, made more indents in the wood rather than smoothing it. Harder than it looks, you made it look simple.
You’ll get the hang of it!
Very useful video, thanks. Thanks.
Great to see you using your grandfather's jack plane.
I bought the same plane that you demonstrated on in the video. Bought it from Harbor Freight and couldn’t get it to work properly. But, thanks to you and your tips that will change.
Thanks a hand airplane with bent elbows as wings it can also be used as a belly flop if needed
Thanks for this - I've had a Record plane for years, and when I took it apart to sharpen the cutting iron I couldn't figure out how to set it up again. D'oh! But you break down the process very well and now I've got my plane back in working order, thanks to you. In fact, it's working better now than it did when it was brand new.
sorry to be so offtopic but does any of you know of a tool to get back into an Instagram account..?
I somehow lost the login password. I love any tips you can give me.
@Zavier Garrett instablaster :)
@Jaziel Tripp I really appreciate your reply. I got to the site thru google and im waiting for the hacking stuff now.
Takes quite some time so I will get back to you later when my account password hopefully is recovered.
@Jaziel Tripp it worked and I now got access to my account again. I'm so happy!
Thank you so much you saved my account!
@Zavier Garrett Happy to help xD
Thank you for this straight-to-the-point video. I recently purchased a cheap and poorly made Stanley #5 (looks a lot like your Record). I’ve been flattening the sole, 10 minutes at a time, over the past few days (that is, working it for ten minutes x4 or 5 times each day). I’m glad I started with 80 grit sandpaper! The high spot is straight down the center, and the area around the mouth was also quite high. I’m finally getting close to perfectly flat. It’s been tempting to use a lot of force, but I’m letting the weight of the plane do the work.
I hadn’t taken a good look at the knife until today, and it’s filled me with a bit of despair. It’s not straight (the edge is irregular and not at a right angle) when held against a square.
Thanks a lot. Thats a
very helpful video for a beginner.
Amazing very informative video ive learnt alot about hand planes bravo lad be blessed
Cheers Mr rag n bone Brown, my no5 hand plane was ok, but not quite right. It was the mouth was too close so I adjusted it and a sharpen up the blade. What a dream to use now.
Thank you!
👍 great!