Thanks for watching! With western planes you work on the push stroke. In order to do that well you have to have alot of weight to lean against in a work bench. I live on a third floor apartment so having a 300+ lb bench is simply not going to happen. With Japanese woodworking the planes work off of the pull stroke. This does not require that much weight because a pull can act like a wedge under its own tension. So with Japanese woodworking it simply requires less weight and less implements overall. It's also just really enjoyable to me!
@@Lemongrasspicker right on man. I just recently got in to woodworking and I love it. But I also kinda feel your pain as far as not having room. But I just made do. I live in a trailer park so I just work out of my living room lol. But thank you for your time and great videos!! Always a pleasure.
Nice kanna - do you mind sharing where you ordered it from? I looked at a few places and they didn't have one that small. I like to make Japanese puzzle boxes and other small items and that plane would be a great size. Thanks!
Dave Ratynski thanks for watching. The link gets broken when I try to include it in a comment for some reason. If you go to eBay and look up a seller named fujihisajp you will find him. He has some other neat things he makes listed on there as well.
Lemongrasspicker found it and you are right about lots of cool stuff. Thanks! And I enjoy your videos. You mentioned 120 deg heat in one of your videos, got that where I live too. No fun.
How much tuning did you end up needing to do on the plane body when you got this? I just ordered one from Fujihisa and they seem like they need a bit of work. I don't have a chisel small enough to fit into the abutments and they seem a little tight 😅
That has to be the cutest little plane I’ve ever seen!
Thanks I have found another strategy in selling items packing it with Japanese writing news paper.
Very beautiful 😻
Thanks!
Very nice! What made you get into Japanese woodworking instead of western? If I may be so bold......
Thanks for watching! With western planes you work on the push stroke. In order to do that well you have to have alot of weight to lean against in a work bench. I live on a third floor apartment so having a 300+ lb bench is simply not going to happen. With Japanese woodworking the planes work off of the pull stroke. This does not require that much weight because a pull can act like a wedge under its own tension. So with Japanese woodworking it simply requires less weight and less implements overall. It's also just really enjoyable to me!
@@Lemongrasspicker right on man. I just recently got in to woodworking and I love it. But I also kinda feel your pain as far as not having room. But I just made do. I live in a trailer park so I just work out of my living room lol. But thank you for your time and great videos!! Always a pleasure.
Nice kanna - do you mind sharing where you ordered it from? I looked at a few places and they didn't have one that small. I like to make Japanese puzzle boxes and other small items and that plane would be a great size. Thanks!
Dave Ratynski thanks for watching. The link gets broken when I try to include it in a comment for some reason. If you go to eBay and look up a seller named fujihisajp you will find him. He has some other neat things he makes listed on there as well.
Lemongrasspicker found it and you are right about lots of cool stuff. Thanks! And I enjoy your videos. You mentioned 120 deg heat in one of your videos, got that where I live too. No fun.
Yes sir, hotter than a frying pan at times. But you gotta do what you gotta do!
How much tuning did you end up needing to do on the plane body when you got this? I just ordered one from Fujihisa and they seem like they need a bit of work. I don't have a chisel small enough to fit into the abutments and they seem a little tight 😅
It needed a small amount. I just used needle files to fit the blade and adjust the sole. Alot easier than chisels for planes this small lol
@@Lemongrasspicker good excuse as any for me to buy some needle files :)
@@peterlu8947 yes indeed!
I didn't see any wedge. How is the blade held in?
These are friction fit, the blade acts as it's own wedge
ありがとうございます!さよなら^ ^
I looking forward next your video: )
bayashi23, thanks for watching! Also thank you for the inspiration on your channel as well. ありがとうございます!
Onde adquiriu essa jóia?
Ebay
@@Lemongrasspicker excelente!!
how much was it ? it's very nice👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
Thanks Juan, it was about 50 USD
Is there a web site I can look in to it . Thank you for your time.
nice kanna :-)
Thanks Jorgen, it's an nice little slicer