For the last few weeks Ive been spending my free time dipping into the new translation of "Roubo On Marquetry" and enjoying every page. Ive found I cannot burn my way through it very quickly because the things Im reading in there set my synapses alight and I have to digest the ideas before I move forward.
Then Friday I came home from work to find my copy of Joseph Moxons "The Art Of Joinery" had arrived. So paging back and forth between both of these historic tomes is amazing. If I didnt know any better Id say those jokers over at Lost Art Press planned it that way.
In Section 3 he spends ink talking about the differences in setting the depth of the plane iron for a wooden fore plane. Later in the text Chris writes about the order he planes down rough stock and that often he works from a heavy set fore plane to a fine set fore plane followed by a smoothing plane. In essence, the process uses two fore planes.
I use the number 5 with a heavily cambered blade to do the heavy lifting. I use it to traverse the board and knock down the high spots to cure wind and cup. Then I follow with my number 6, I have a lighter camber on the blade and I use it set fairly fine to finish out the flattening and erase the tracks left by the number 5. The final touches them come from a number 4 smoothing plane.
Ive found success using that system and Ive stuck with it. Its kind of fun to hear that backed up by both Moxons and Chriss writing.
But the plane had already been cleaned up, restored, and the price was so cheep Im embarrassed to repeat it. I picked it up and it brought it home and that plane has managed to touch nearly every project Ive built since. I pride myself on keeping a modest tool collection. Just what I need to work, and maybe a little more. I could get along without the cursed number 6 but it does make things easier.
It really goes to prove one of the things Ive come to love about woodworking. There are a ton of different ways to do every task and, provided they are safe, every single one of them is correct.
Ratione et Passionis
Oldwolf
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