I said at the end that I tried it on silky oak and that it was very dense. That was wrong, even though one of the pieces was silky oak I meant to say the spotted gum was very dense. Anyway, hopefully you enjoy the video! :)
Pask Makes well mister Pask this mistake of yours has made me question my entire life. Silky oak, spotted gum, republican, Democrat, human, cat I just don’t know anymore.
I have done some woodworks in the past but this woodwork plan ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG helps me do much in a far lesser time than i used to do i have already built several projects with this plan and i intend to do many more soon. Thank you so much!
Message. Fellow woodworker and creator of the craft of making things. It was a pleasure watching you to see someone that's like myself .I love making things out of just about anything. Thank you for your website I'm glad I came across it I will watch more. February 14, 2020 at 6:42 PM. Michigan USA ...
Probably the first big investment I would recommend if you plan on doing a lot of woodworking. This ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxIzvvTi3_Qc8JnVdYYRJCvuoDC4QjTzeL and a good jointer are going to change the game. If you don’t have a jointer, you can built a sled for this planer and still make straight, flat and square boards. I recommend this kit with the infeed and out feed tables. For longer boards you’ll still want some type of support to minimize snipe.If you don’t have dust collection when you buy this, it will be your next purchase. This tool has powered chip ejection meaning it will throw wood chips across your entire shop.The stock knives leave a great finish themselves but can get dinged up on knots and the like in harder woods. They are fairly cheap to replace and this kit comes with a second set. There’s also plenty of videos showing you how to resharpen these.Upgrading to a Shelix head (an investment that basically doubles the price of this tool) gives you a tool comparable to much more expensive ones. If you get the chance it’s worth it but this tool is great even in stock form.
Thought the same, but I suggest putting the magnetic square in a plastic bag - all magnetic debris will fall off when you remove the square from the bag (otherwise it's a nightmare to clean it)
As always Neil, another practical tool we all can use in our shops. I think I'll make a few of them for the other woodworkers in my family. It's small enough to fit in a work apron or tool belt. Thanks!
At first appearance this seemed to be a relatively simple little tool, but became more intricate and therefore a much more interesting tool which demanded to be reproduced, even if it is only used a few times and then placed in a shadow box to display in my shop. Thank you for sharing and Kudos on your attention to safety as well.
Just found the link to your photography page, Amazing pictures. Angle of the north is a couple of hours from me and I love to visit there, and Eilean Donan Castle is another favourite of mine. I've been to dozens of Scottish castles over the years, its become a bit of a hobby visiting ones I've not found before. And of course Lindisfarne, I hope you got to drink the Mead while you were there, I have a bottle in my cupboard for special occasions....
I just got a chance to watch this video. It was great! You're the top of the heap with me man! Thank you for your guidance and tutorials. Once I finaly get retired and moved to my new home and shop I will get to start making the projects that I have saved over all of these years. Just another year or so...
Neil, I have been thinking of making some small hand planes-pocket size, lately. I love the luthier thumb plane you made and I just came across this video. I dont know how I missed it 4 yrs ago. This is the perfect size I'm talking about too! I do not own a mill or belt grinder like yours, but I get by with out them. You have inspired me to try my hand at making some planes out of metal. So far I made a small router plane out of steel and brass. I did make the knurling jig about a month after it was released. It works beautifully and I haven't had to buy thumb screws ever since. I keep an eye out for any brass hardware, hex bolts screws, hinges, etcetera. About 2 months ago a elderly gentlemen in town was selling off old hand tools, power tools and hardware. And I hit a jackpot. A 12"x 12" × 12" wooden box full of old brass wood screws, nuts & bolts, small hinges to large door hinges, and even small drawer pulls. The second larger wooden box was full of copper, brass, tin, stainless steel and steel cut offs. Some f the pieces are long others only a few inches long, and thick pieces and thin pieces but all usable as I use brass alot when I work with certain dark tone woods. He only wanted $20 for both boxes, which are very heavy because they were filled to the top. That is a true bargain at 20 bucks. I'm making some measuring and marking gages out of a combo of wood and metal for Christmas gifts. These two boxes will keep me supplied for the next 5 years, lol. Thanks Neil for always being a creative and inspiritual content provider. Take care!
Hi. I always look out for new videos from you. I litterly follow hundreds of makers every day for n hour before bed and you are in my top 5 of them all. It has been a while sinds your last one. Greetings from Holland
I absolutely love watching your videos mate, the attention to detail you show is fantastic 👏 it's great to see a fellow Aussie successful as you in this genre 😀
@Impending Doom No problem! Neil has gotta be the most talented and creative thinking woodworker on YT. Glad you like his channel and thanks for listening to the podcast. :)
Such a useful tool for doing quick and consistent roundovers. I will definitely make myself one of these as there is simply no good reason not to have one, and it seems to be a perfect project for a cold winters night. Thanks for yet a brilliant video!
Handsome tool. I like the brass parts. I didn't know about roundover planes and I have a problem with my kitchen cabinets that I buff the back of my hand all the time reaching into the sharp shelves. And as I get older my skin is getting thinner so I can't survive a little buff without bleeding. I'm ordering one of these planes from Amazon right away. I got to fix all my kitchen cabinets pronto. Quick work with the plane. A little touch up stain and my knuckles will be much happier.
You can easily bypass the issue of hard wood by using wide head nails. Predrill a few holes (probably four nails spaced out are more than enough) make sure the heads are sunk under the surface, then glue them in. A few passes on the belt or with a file and it's an as-metal plane.
That little beauty represents more to me than a small (shop made) hand tool. Rounding or Softening an edge is a "WoodHead's" daily exercise; .... Kinda like 'breathing'! I suspect that I'm not alone when I say there are WoodHeads that experience a pleasurable emotion to the feel and sound of a hand powered tool! Especially when you're a retired senior with an itch to work wood at 3:00AM! If I manage to duplicate your exquisite (Polished Brass & HardWood) --WoodPorn I'm sure I'll keep it close to me for at least a week, ...just so I can admire it! I can already hear my wife asking "What is that and why is it on the dinner table"? :-) Thank you! Chris
@@bp83945 a kind of meditation my friend, makes a change from all the speeded up fast soundtrack videos out there, just a likable skilled man showing you how, the next best thing to standing by the side of a craftsman or woman, I really hope UA-cam continues to feature this sort of work because people still need these skills and they have to be learned while there are still good teachers to pass them on, Neil is one of the best imho
Well done!! I love a tool built to be brilliant at a very specific task. That could apply to the plane or the knurling jig, they're both excellent!! Cheers!
Here’s a tip: at the 12:24 mark, before shortening the bolt, screw in one or two nuts in. After shortening, remove the nuts and the nuts will help rethread the bolts threading.
Awesome job Pask as usual , at 4:50 looks like you used a caliper to mark where you wanted to cut the blade , a no-no for me as a machinist, a scribe on a height gauge makes a precision scribe mark , thanks for video & May God Bless
Hahaha, good luck out there trying to make anything that remotely looks like what this guy can make. He's well versed in designing and making tools. I think he sits around at night sipping his tea and smiling at what monstrosities are being brought to life following one of his "TEACH YOU HOW" videos. I know mine would have been laughable had I attempted such. That's why I buy store bought I don't go wrong from the start this way I get on with life at my pace. Good luck to you fellows that create. 🤘👌🤙
You had to make two, so you could put a roundover on the planes themselves! Loved the Tempering by Eye - beautiful timing and your brass fittings make bought ones look inferior!
i really like the brass blade-set that you made and it has given me the idea to do something similar to some old Japanese planes that i have that suffered water damage and dont hold the blade true anymore.
Another excellent video Neil. As I was watching this, I was thinking I must make one for myself. Then I realised that I rarely even use my trim router. But watching you make one, it still seemed like a good idea to make one.
@@ragnkja Yes. Plus I just did some little trim pieces and to be honest it would have been faster to use this hand tool if I had a proper workbench to use it on. Much better for smaller parts I imagine.
Wonderful build. I was thinking of making a vice based setup for knurling similar to yours - and a week later you uploaded the video. Guess you saved me some mishaps... :) Thanks!!!
I'm sure that one could buy such a plane from a sole-less corporation for $20 or $30. But this is so much better. There is a reward in building one's own tools. I have a scrap of Ipé in the shop that is calling out to be used for such a plane. After seeing this video, and thinking back to all the times I've dug out the trim router, found the 1/8" roundover bit, fiddled to get it just right, only to spend 30 seconds actually using it, I cringe. You have inspired me to do better. Thank you.
First Leonard da Vinci was born then pask makes Niel was born and takes the relay pin further. I´m so impressed not only by this video but everything he makes and make it look so easy.
For filing grooves like that, I find chainsaw files immensely useful as they cut well, are availiable in different sizes, and they don't have a taper. Also they're cheap.
Yesterday I though I could use such a plane. Using the roundover bit with a router is not always the best way. Great video! That is definitely on my to do list - Thanks!
Hi Mr. Pask: I hope you and yours are well. My friend Ian is making up the metals bits and and I'm making the wood parts. So we'll make a handful of these little guys and assemble them when the all clear is announced. I'm working off an old laptop and I couldn't clearly see the the angle for the mouth of the plane? And 25˙for the iron. During the cold months I become the Kitchen Kounter Karpenter, Ian and I get together once a month. His itty bitty workspace I call Shed Zeppelin. Thanks Pask your spirit is infectious and helps a great deal to get through these times. I guess Everett, Ontario, Canada is "Social Distancing", GoodEnuff Eh! Cheers Jerry Walker
wood planes are always a good hobby project as you can never have enough planes, and you can make them as simple or as extravagant as you want for an innumerable amount of uses/profiles, especially in cabinet making. Sure, a router might be easier (but bits get expensive...), but you just can't beat the precision and finesse of a hand plane. It also adds an element of pride to the finished product that just isn't that common these days.
Brilliant as usual but .... oh no I have reorder my list of things Pask makes that I have to make. I am 6 months of 64 and when I grow up I want to be just like you. Keep it coming my life would be incomplete without your videos and ideas.
This is a brilliant project for the lad I'm training ! This will tax him but I know when he's completed it the satisfaction will be memorable......Brilliant work again sir!
I said at the end that I tried it on silky oak and that it was very dense. That was wrong, even though one of the pieces was silky oak I meant to say the spotted gum was very dense. Anyway, hopefully you enjoy the video! :)
Pask Makes well mister Pask this mistake of yours has made me question my entire life. Silky oak, spotted gum, republican, Democrat, human, cat I just don’t know anymore.
On a serious note, thank you for taking the time to share these projects with the masses....even them asses.
Thanks. That's a lovely little plane. I'm sure it will come in handy.
Hey, hoping you're on the mend now.
Hey pask, did you give permission for someone to use your work?
ua-cam.com/video/0hjCQyhBBt8/v-deo.html
This channel is copying your stuff. ua-cam.com/video/0hjCQyhBBt8/v-deo.html
I have done some woodworks in the past but this woodwork plan ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxZF0EMnrujZvqHhGkxiz559uIABJWR9TG helps me do much in a far lesser time than i used to do i have already built several projects with this plan and i intend to do many more soon. Thank you so much!
Message. Fellow woodworker and creator of the craft of making things. It was a pleasure watching you to see someone that's like myself .I love making things out of just about anything. Thank you for your website I'm glad I came across it I will watch more. February 14, 2020 at 6:42 PM. Michigan USA ...
You get very original and high-quality tools. Continue to delight us with your products. Thank you.
Probably the first big investment I would recommend if you plan on doing a lot of woodworking. This ua-cam.com/users/postUgkxIzvvTi3_Qc8JnVdYYRJCvuoDC4QjTzeL and a good jointer are going to change the game. If you don’t have a jointer, you can built a sled for this planer and still make straight, flat and square boards. I recommend this kit with the infeed and out feed tables. For longer boards you’ll still want some type of support to minimize snipe.If you don’t have dust collection when you buy this, it will be your next purchase. This tool has powered chip ejection meaning it will throw wood chips across your entire shop.The stock knives leave a great finish themselves but can get dinged up on knots and the like in harder woods. They are fairly cheap to replace and this kit comes with a second set. There’s also plenty of videos showing you how to resharpen these.Upgrading to a Shelix head (an investment that basically doubles the price of this tool) gives you a tool comparable to much more expensive ones. If you get the chance it’s worth it but this tool is great even in stock form.
Smart idea using the magnetic square as a workholder.
Thought the same, but I suggest putting the magnetic square in a plastic bag - all magnetic debris will fall off when you remove the square from the bag (otherwise it's a nightmare to clean it)
Agreed. I have those for welding and never thought of them in this use.
nice one
@@JoseSilveira-newhandleforYT Or use a magnet you can turn on and off like the one on the base for my dial indicator. Not sure what they're called...
Kilo India
Electromagnet
As always Neil, another practical tool we all can use in our shops. I think I'll make a few of them for the other woodworkers in my family. It's small enough to fit in a work apron or tool belt. Thanks!
Can't thank you enough for walking me through each step the process. Because I plan to make one of these.
No worries - glad to hear you'll be making one! :)
I completely agree. He made every step seem so easy and intuitive, but as I was watching it was a new idea the whole way through.
If you had said "I plane to make one of these" that would have been funny.... 😂
@@warrenholmar1129 you're so punny
I'm a novice woodworker, and your videos are so inspiring. You've really made me appreciate hand tools. Thank you so much.
You are an amazing Talent! I have been a Shop Teacher for 33 years. I wish you were my teacher in college. I retired in 2003. RWB
At first appearance this seemed to be a relatively simple little tool, but became more intricate and therefore a much more interesting tool which demanded to be reproduced, even if it is only used a few times and then placed in a shadow box to display in my shop. Thank you for sharing and Kudos on your attention to safety as well.
Just found the link to your photography page, Amazing pictures. Angle of the north is a couple of hours from me and I love to visit there, and Eilean Donan Castle is another favourite of mine. I've been to dozens of Scottish castles over the years, its become a bit of a hobby visiting ones I've not found before. And of course Lindisfarne, I hope you got to drink the Mead while you were there, I have a bottle in my cupboard for special occasions....
I just got a chance to watch this video. It was great! You're the top of the heap with me man! Thank you for your guidance and tutorials. Once I finaly get retired and moved to my new home and shop I will get to start making the projects that I have saved over all of these years. Just another year or so...
Neil, I have been thinking of making some small hand planes-pocket size, lately. I love the luthier thumb plane you made and I just came across this video. I dont know how I missed it 4 yrs ago. This is the perfect size I'm talking about too!
I do not own a mill or belt grinder like yours, but I get by with out them. You have inspired me to try my hand at making some planes out of metal. So far I made a small router plane out of steel and brass. I did make the knurling jig about a month after it was released. It works beautifully and I haven't had to buy thumb screws ever since. I keep an eye out for any brass hardware, hex bolts screws, hinges, etcetera. About 2 months ago a elderly gentlemen in town was selling off old hand tools, power tools and hardware. And I hit a jackpot. A 12"x 12" × 12" wooden box full of old brass wood screws, nuts & bolts, small hinges to large door hinges, and even small drawer pulls. The second larger wooden box was full of copper, brass, tin, stainless steel and steel cut offs. Some f the pieces are long others only a few inches long, and thick pieces and thin pieces but all usable as I use brass alot when I work with certain dark tone woods. He only wanted $20 for both boxes, which are very heavy because they were filled to the top. That is a true bargain at 20 bucks. I'm making some measuring and marking gages out of a combo of wood and metal for Christmas gifts. These two boxes will keep me supplied for the next 5 years, lol.
Thanks Neil for always being a creative and inspiritual content provider. Take care!
Hi. I always look out for new videos from you. I litterly follow hundreds of makers every day for n hour before bed and you are in my top 5 of them all.
It has been a while sinds your last one.
Greetings from Holland
Thanks very much Dave! :)
I absolutely love watching your videos mate, the attention to detail you show is fantastic 👏 it's great to see a fellow Aussie successful as you in this genre 😀
No words to describe the creativity and simplicity of this tool.
Excellent video as usual! Not too long, not too short, brilliant camera detail and clear audio descriptions too!
Thanks very much! :)
You're the best Woodworker UA-camr I've ever seen. Thanks a lot for these information.
Love your simple but immensely useful Scrapwood Challenge series.
Turned out fantastic! Sure loved how the brass ended up looking.
Thanks Drew! I really enjoyed making the brass pieces! :)
@Impending Doom No problem! Neil has gotta be the most talented and creative thinking woodworker on YT. Glad you like his channel and thanks for listening to the podcast. :)
Beautiful little roundover plane Neil! Thanks for sharing the video with us.👌👍😎JP
Always so inspiring to see your scrapwood challenge projects. It turned out beautiful and the video was awesome as well!
Glad you enjoyed it! :)
Very nice! And it looks simple enough that you could make a set of them with different radii, and like you said a 45° chamfer as well.
Another beautiful and useful build.
Excellent, clear video quality too.
So glad that you don't feel the need to add music.
I really like your hand filing technique. Steady, aimed, deliberate strokes. Nice.
Great project as they all are.
Nice one!!! Time spent with you in the workshop are good time, thanks. Best to you and your family from Denmark.
Excellent. Scrapwood is back.
Absolutely loaded with features and tricks. A gem of a vid. Hats off man, total genius
Such a useful tool for doing quick and consistent roundovers. I will definitely make myself one of these as there is simply no good reason not to have one, and it seems to be a perfect project for a cold winters night. Thanks for yet a brilliant video!
Thanks very much! It really is an enjoyable little project! :)
That knurling jig is slick! Cool techniques! Thanks for sharing.
I'm a Korean viewer, and i like the intro music cause it makes me feel like it's a fairytale. Nice enjoyable, and peaceful video.
A very nice project and a really useful tool. Thank you for the video.
Ваши видео лучше любого расслабляющего средства))) А можно почаще выкладывать видео, а то я успеваю соскучиться)))
Рад, что вы наслаждаетесь видео! Спасибо! :)
Very beautiful craftsmanship, amazing story. Thank you for sharing your story. God bless you and your family
Handsome tool. I like the brass parts.
I didn't know about roundover planes and I have a problem with my kitchen cabinets that I buff the back of my hand all the time reaching into the sharp shelves. And as I get older my skin is getting thinner so I can't survive a little buff without bleeding. I'm ordering one of these planes from Amazon right away. I got to fix all my kitchen cabinets pronto. Quick work with the plane. A little touch up stain and my knuckles will be much happier.
Toujours aussi ingénieux et mise en oeuvre impeccable comme d'habitude !!! Grand Merci à vous !!!
I've got some mahogany, brass and steel in stock ...time for me to make another tool! Thanks for all the great ideas and inspiration
You can easily bypass the issue of hard wood by using wide head nails. Predrill a few holes (probably four nails spaced out are more than enough) make sure the heads are sunk under the surface, then glue them in. A few passes on the belt or with a file and it's an as-metal plane.
I lover your scrap wood challenges and this one does not disappoint. Great idea, great application, great video. Thank you.
That little beauty represents more to me than a small (shop made) hand tool. Rounding or Softening an edge is a "WoodHead's" daily exercise; .... Kinda like 'breathing'! I suspect that I'm not alone when I say there are WoodHeads that experience a pleasurable emotion to the feel and sound of a hand powered tool! Especially when you're a retired senior with an itch to work wood at 3:00AM! If I manage to duplicate your exquisite (Polished Brass & HardWood) --WoodPorn I'm sure I'll keep it close to me for at least a week, ...just so I can admire it! I can already hear my wife asking "What is that and why is it on the dinner table"? :-)
Thank you!
Chris
It is always relaxing to watch your videos. THX
11:52 I was starting to fall asleep and you shocked me awake when you started talking.
I find all these videos with the soft tool noises are like a lullaby
@@bp83945 a kind of meditation my friend, makes a change from all the speeded up fast soundtrack videos out there, just a likable skilled man showing you how, the next best thing to standing by the side of a craftsman or woman, I really hope UA-cam continues to feature this sort of work because people still need these skills and they have to be learned while there are still good teachers to pass them on, Neil is one of the best imho
Another well made shop tool, thanks for sharing your skills and knowledge
great video...loved the camphor laurel wood..Looks beautiful
Well done!! I love a tool built to be brilliant at a very specific task. That could apply to the plane or the knurling jig, they're both excellent!! Cheers!
Thanks very much! It's surprising how often I've used the knurling jig already. :):)
Small and Simple to make...brilliant.
Lovely job as always Neil, your videos really do lift the spirit. 👍
Keep up the good work my friend.
Here’s a tip: at the 12:24 mark, before shortening the bolt, screw in one or two nuts in. After shortening, remove the nuts and the nuts will help rethread the bolts threading.
Thanks Neil, doing the experimentation for us!
Great video, Neil. Thanks!
Truly awesome yet suttle manufacturing of a tool.thank u brother!
Awesome job Pask as usual , at 4:50 looks like you used a caliper to mark where you wanted to cut the blade , a no-no for me as a machinist, a scribe on a height gauge makes a precision scribe mark , thanks for video & May God Bless
Great make! The wood parts and the metal parts. Very nice tool. Thank you for sharing.
Great tool and video. I like the brass holder and knurled knob on the second one.
That’s a charming and effective little tool!
Un saludo, genial cepillo de cantos, creo que un cepillo como este no lo encuentras ni en el mercado y menos con la calidad que tiene.
Maravilloso.
A very clever solution, I did not even consider that approach.
Great job, lots of hand skills and engineering knowledge on display.
Very nice project and job well done! Watching your video gave me a kick to spend some time in the shop! Cheers, Peter
Terrific video! Learned several things in this video. Thanks! It turned out to be beautiful piece.
Hahaha, good luck out there trying to make anything that remotely looks like what this guy can make. He's well versed in designing and making tools. I think he sits around at night sipping his tea and smiling at what monstrosities are being brought to life following one of his "TEACH YOU HOW" videos. I know mine would have been laughable had I attempted such. That's why I buy store bought I don't go wrong from the start this way I get on with life at my pace. Good luck to you fellows that create. 🤘👌🤙
You had to make two, so you could put a roundover on the planes themselves! Loved the Tempering by Eye - beautiful timing and your brass fittings make bought ones look inferior!
Good thing scrapwood never runs out!
Thanks very much Keith - I really enjoyed making the brass parts! :)
fun, easy, and useful project.
Love this! Great job Neil!!! I’m going to have to make one of these as well as a chamfer plane, perhaps a matching set! 😉🌲
Use the same body, and just make an extra blade.
@@truthspace5525 good idea!
I need some camphor laurel seeds. I always love the grain in your scrapwood challenges.
i really like the brass blade-set that you made and it has given me the idea to do something similar to some old Japanese planes that i have that suffered water damage and dont hold the blade true anymore.
Here is a nice looking little hand plane!
Advoko,Still waiting for you newest video! 😁😁
Авдотку Физкульт-привет :)
Another excellent video Neil. As I was watching this, I was thinking I must make one for myself. Then I realised that I rarely even use my trim router.
But watching you make one, it still seemed like a good idea to make one.
Dave's Shed
This looks a lot handier than a trim router: smaller, lighter, and doesn’t need electricity.
@@ragnkja Yes. Plus I just did some little trim pieces and to be honest it would have been faster to use this hand tool if I had a proper workbench to use it on. Much better for smaller parts I imagine.
Wonderful build.
I was thinking of making a vice based setup for knurling similar to yours - and a week later you uploaded the video.
Guess you saved me some mishaps... :) Thanks!!!
Es agradable ver que cuentan con las herramientas necesarias que les facilitan la fabricación de todo lo que se proponen. Felicitaciones. Y adelante.
I'm sure that one could buy such a plane from a sole-less corporation for $20 or $30. But this is so much better. There is a reward in building one's own tools. I have a scrap of Ipé in the shop that is calling out to be used for such a plane. After seeing this video, and thinking back to all the times I've dug out the trim router, found the 1/8" roundover bit, fiddled to get it just right, only to spend 30 seconds actually using it, I cringe. You have inspired me to do better. Thank you.
First Leonard da Vinci was born then pask makes Niel was born and takes the relay pin further. I´m so impressed not only by this video but everything he makes and make it look so easy.
For filing grooves like that, I find chainsaw files immensely useful as they cut well, are availiable in different sizes, and they don't have a taper. Also they're cheap.
I love the way it turned out. Beautifully done.
www.bahist.in/
Yesterday I though I could use such a plane. Using the roundover bit with a router is not always the best way. Great video! That is definitely on my to do list - Thanks!
At 4:35 . . . . .Brilliant! Why didn't I think if this? LOL I've had many a ground fingertip or knuckle.
That's a very handy little tool. I honestly didn't know I needed one till now.
That was really neat to watch. Well done! That brass work was amazing!
Just subscribed. Lovely little tool and a nice video too. Just the right amount of talking in way of explanation, really good. Thanks.
Hi Mr. Pask: I hope you and yours are well. My friend Ian is making up the metals bits and and I'm making the wood parts. So we'll make a handful of these little guys and assemble them when the all clear is announced. I'm working off an old laptop and I couldn't clearly see the the angle for the mouth of the plane? And 25˙for the iron. During the cold months I become the Kitchen Kounter Karpenter, Ian and I get together once a month. His itty bitty workspace I call Shed Zeppelin. Thanks Pask your spirit is infectious and helps a great deal to get through these times. I guess Everett, Ontario, Canada is "Social Distancing", GoodEnuff Eh! Cheers Jerry Walker
Great idea the magnet while you grinded the file blade
I think I will give it a go...thanks as always Neil
That's great to hear Andy! :)
that wood always comes up great with a finish
This is a great little build and I will be adding this to my things I want to build play list.
اولا شكرا علي ما تقدم من برامج صناعية ونرجو منك ان تمدنا بالمقييس الاشيتء التي تصنعها وشكراااااااااا
@@hajibgamoun1897 sorry I'm not able to read this from my phone. Maybe later on the computer I can change it over to English.
My favorite UA-cam channel! Love this. Please post more!
Both were a sensational build! Thank you!
Always an Awesome Educational video experience Y'alls
wood planes are always a good hobby project as you can never have enough planes, and you can make them as simple or as extravagant as you want for an innumerable amount of uses/profiles, especially in cabinet making. Sure, a router might be easier (but bits get expensive...), but you just can't beat the precision and finesse of a hand plane. It also adds an element of pride to the finished product that just isn't that common these days.
As always, you have made a wonderful tool from ordinary scrap. Literally making a silk purse from a sow's ear.
Brilliant as usual but .... oh no I have reorder my list of things Pask makes that I have to make. I am 6 months of 64 and when I grow up I want to be just like you. Keep it coming my life would be incomplete without your videos and ideas.
Thanks very much Neil! Glad you're enjoying the videos! :)
That's great. Very well done.
Master Craftsman at work. Great Job
Lovely result Neil - nicely done. Cheers, Craig
Always a pleasure to watch you make something new out of stuff mortals would throw away. ;)
Another use for a 1-2-3 block. Cool!
Looks beautiful Neil.
This looks so handy. Will be making this myself!
Thanks Sam - that's great to hear! :)
What a fantastic and good looking job👍
Great Project. Beautyful peace of scrapwood.
Thanks.
This is a brilliant project for the lad I'm training ! This will tax him but I know when he's completed it the satisfaction will be memorable......Brilliant work again sir!