Probably a simple question - what angle do you sharpen the blade at on a 140 skew block plane to control tear out? 40 deg? My version doesn’t have a knicker so I plan on using it mostly with the grain.
Probably a simple question - what angle do you sharpen the blade at on a 140 skew block plane to control tear out? 40 deg? My version doesn’t have a knicker so I plan on using it mostly with the grain.
Hi Keegan
It is not imperative to have a nicker for cross grain planing. Score the boundary with a sharp cutting gauge (such as a Japanese knife gauge or a wheel gauge), and work up against this. The line is knifed with heavy strokes at the start, and again after a few runs with the plane. This will keep the sidewall from tapering. If there is any tearout as you near the depth wanted for the rebate, as you are forming a rebate against the grain, finish with a shoulder plane planing with the grain.
Regards from Perth
Derek
Thanks Derek. IÂ’ll try that out. Any thoughts on sharpening angle? Given that the skew lowers the effective angle, shouldnÂ’t I sharpen a secondary angle that is steeper to reduce tear out. Or does that defeat the purpose of the skew?
On my 140 the bevel is about 28 degrees. I keep one primary bevel angle after some time and lots or stropping i restore the primary bevel.
Its the same angle I use on my Apron planes.
Good Luck
Aj