Tuesday, October 17, 2017

Moving Fillister: My interpretation


Being been inspired by the original Moving Fillister plane I own (image above), I tried to build this rebate plane with adjustable fence, capable of very good work along the grain as well as across the grain. 
Its skewed blade (20°) eases the cut, while a nicker, situated just before the main blade, has the purpose of pre-cutting wood fibers and obtaining a clean result across the grain too.



I used walnut wood for the plane body and wedge, while the sole, the parallel fence and the depth stop are of hornbeam, a wood particulary resistent to the wear and which creates an attractive chromatic effect when coupled to a darker wood as the walnut. A hornbeam piece is inserted at the top of the plane, too.


The parallel fence moves on the sole through two elongated holes and is kept in place by two M6 bolts which are screwed in the correspondent nuts inserted into the sole.

Tuesday, April 25, 2017

Woodworking Meeting in Italy

Hi all,
May 20-21 2017 is the date for the Second edition of woodworking meeting "Due Giorni per le Mani", a woodworking event focalized on hand tools and where experts, passionate people and tool makers will exchange their personal experiences. The meeting will be organized by the Cultural Association "La Malaspina" and the magazine "legnolab" in  Viterbo, an artistic medieval town between Rome and Florence. So, if you are planning holidays in Italy in that period, could join your woodworking passion with your artistic trip. Free entry!!
info@legnolab.it
info@scuoladellegno.it







Friday, February 24, 2017

Scrub plane II





Here it is another scrub plane just terminated: beech body and wild olive sole (unfortunately this wood is ending......I'll have to ask again Michele (who lives in Puglia) for supplying me with another little amount of it. 

This time I tried to add a beading moulding to plane sides and I have to say I am satisfied. I cut them with a Stanley 50, equipped with its narrower beading cutter.


The front handle is inserted by a sliding dovetail joint, coupled with a round tenon in its bottom
A mortice and tenon joint has been used for fixing the rear handle, behind the blade. In both cases I used drawbored dowels for reinforcing the joint.
  


The building tecnique is based on cutting and gluing the plane body, so is easier to obtain the throat and cut into the sides for accomodating the wedge and blade.  
 






 






You can see a little hole on the front. Our woodworm friend (died!) loves wild olive, providing to the plane a vintage look. 



Tuesday, January 31, 2017

Drawbored mortice and tenon


It is a joint easy to realize as well as very strong and traction-resistant; it permits of making joints without glue, too. The secret are offset bores through mortice and tenon: when the pin is inserted, it forces the tenon in the mortice and keeps it strongly in place.


I utilized this tecnique for inserting a Jack plane wooden handle in its mortice
Normally, I use to glue the handle in place and secure it by a screw, driven through the handle foot, but the drawbored mortice and tenon seems to me a good alternative, utilized in the past for this purpose.


In this case I have had to utilize an handle with the grain oriented perpendicular in respect to the body grain (I thank Paul Bouchard for his very good advices) and with little lateral projection (the horn is just outlined for avoid its breakage)

First, we can drill through the mortice one or more bores. 
In this case I utilized 6 mm pins for a tenon (the handle foot) 25 mm thick and ca 30 mm long. 
After the bores have been done, the tenon is well inserted in the mortice and the position of bores is marked by the 6 mm drill bit. 
Then, the tenon is extracted and the bores are marked again, this time slightly further back
1 mm ca offset and no more in order to avoid troubles with pin insertion.



We can round and lubricate the pin tips by a little bit of candle wax.
 

 

From last images you can see the plane having an offset handle, an old practice, today no more in use and that seems to give a better ergonomicity to the plane, although the precise reason is unknown. The offset is on the left but normally is on the rigth (of course I am left handled).




 







Ciao
Giuliano