05. One Way to to Prevent Tearout

Поділитися
Вставка
  • Опубліковано 28 чер 2024
  • Remouth a smooth plane so you can plane in any direction without getting tearout.
    Visit www.blackburnbooks.com for books and to sign up for lessons in Woodstock NY.
  • Навчання та стиль

КОМЕНТАРІ • 81

  • @swissthun60
    @swissthun60 9 місяців тому +2

    Re-mouthing a plane is a lost art and you have imparted that knowledge... well done and thank you.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  9 місяців тому

      Many thanks!

  • @charlesfield9286
    @charlesfield9286 25 днів тому

    It’s nice to see a video that’s not about a table saw. Thanks

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  21 день тому

      You're welcome!

  • @stanj9886
    @stanj9886 9 місяців тому +4

    I rewatched your card scraper video and in particular the sharpening section. It was very helpful and explained clearly. It worked perfectly for an old Disston scraper I had in the shop and previously used with little effect. Thank you.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  9 місяців тому +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @jamessunderland362
    @jamessunderland362 Рік тому +16

    Very glad to see a veteran Hand tool woodworker teaching on UA-cam who knows the trade in and out, rather than the hobbyists (blind leading the blind). Great videos and I’m looking forward to your future uploads! Thank you

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +2

      Not sure how veteran I am but thank you so much anyway

  • @ricardoaquino1562
    @ricardoaquino1562 5 місяців тому

    Tks a lot sir for your teaching 👍👍👍

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  5 місяців тому +1

      It's my pleasure

  • @steventrosiek2623
    @steventrosiek2623 6 місяців тому

    Thank you very much for a very informative video on inserting a plane mouth reducing insertion. Your video is the most informative one on youtube. It's complete and easily understood. Love your channel.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  6 місяців тому +1

      Glad it was helpful!

  • @chrisdunham7169
    @chrisdunham7169 11 місяців тому

    Excellent !

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  11 місяців тому

      Many thanks!

  • @tonylenge424
    @tonylenge424 Рік тому

    Excellent tutorial, thanks

  • @hangingoutashingle7784
    @hangingoutashingle7784 Рік тому +1

    Love these videos! Thanks for sharing your knowledge.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Glad you like them!

  • @billffromnh
    @billffromnh Рік тому

    You make remouthing a plane look easier than it probably is. That's what experience does. At the moment, the only wooden plane I have is a new Ulmia block plane. I'll have to keep my eye out for a vintage wooden plane that might need remouthing. Thanks for the education. One never knows too much.

  • @sas999ful
    @sas999ful Рік тому +3

    So glad I chanced upon this series. A master, teaching simply and clearly, and one who clearly loves his trade. Vanishing skills with so many various power tools available. Very informative and enjoyable to watch. Thank you sir

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +3

      Yes, it's the vanishing skills I think are so important in order to maintain a balance with technology if we are to remain human.

  • @timbarry5080
    @timbarry5080 Рік тому

    I read in a book on Japanese Woodworking that they sometimes wipe a damp cloth over the surface of the wood to prevent teat out. The moisture softens the fibers and helps prevent the tearing

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      May well work with Japanese planes.

    • @timbarry5080
      @timbarry5080 Рік тому

      @@gjbmunc I've tried it with my old Stanley's. It seems to work on troublesome grain

  • @Toolsofthepast
    @Toolsofthepast Рік тому

    Very intriguing

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      Watch for a more deailed episode - even more intriguing!

    • @Toolsofthepast
      @Toolsofthepast Рік тому

      @@gjbmunc I will I enjoy your channel

  • @haroldschultz5864
    @haroldschultz5864 Рік тому

    Very instructive sir . I love the no nonsense approach you take to your videos . Nothing wasted and extremely useful . Cheers

  • @josecaceres6853
    @josecaceres6853 Рік тому

    Thank you Graham, I prefer to use hand tools and your lectures have helped me alot.

  • @CleaveMountaineering
    @CleaveMountaineering Рік тому

    I just did this yesterday to a smoothing plane and initial testing says it works great. I have a couple metal body planes with an adjustable mouth plate and that really drove home how important this is. Most of my wooden bench planes need this treatment.

  • @frankagee3157
    @frankagee3157 Рік тому +1

    I just remouthed my first plane. I wish I had seen this video first. Actually I did most of what you have shown. The only mistake I made was the mouth is wider than it needs to be. Oh, well, I will get it right next time. Thanks for the great video, keep the good stuff coming.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Never mind, we all learn well from attempts less than perfect. Keep going@

  • @jameshuntley428
    @jameshuntley428 Рік тому

    Terrific video. Thank you so much for posting. I’m looking forward to checking out your other videos. Outside of the mouth opening size, does your planning technique change when planing across or against the grain?

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      It's usually easier to plane across the grain with the iron adjusted for finer shavings.

  • @ianmurray3820
    @ianmurray3820 10 місяців тому

    This whole subject is fascinating.. begs the question just how adjustable should a frog be on a modern plane , and makes sense of why you should have a selection of planes - set up for different thickness cuts- wide mouth for roughing and very narrow for finishing..? “

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  10 місяців тому

      Different planes makes sense, but the basic rule is the mouth should be no wider than the thickness of the shaving you want, and the thinner the less likely is tearout.

  • @Huttify
    @Huttify Рік тому

    I was pointed here by Wortheffort, and was not disappointed. Thank you for making these videos!

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @kazinix
    @kazinix Рік тому

    Masterclass. Every detail has a reason. After watching many woodworking videos from new generation of woodworkers, I can say that some important details were lost.

  • @jsmxwll
    @jsmxwll Рік тому +1

    Just a lesson I learned:
    I remouthed a plane but used a flatsawn piece of beech to remouth a quartersawn hickory plane. The beech expanded and blew out the cheek on one side. So pay attention to the orientation and maybe the species combination, but I think the orientation is the big one. Wood moves much more radially than it does tangentially.

  • @terencebarnett113
    @terencebarnett113 Рік тому

    Thank you,lm known steptoe to my friends because alway get old tools no one want fix them and use them,I just subscribed and I have 3 planes.wooden Coffin,jack jointer that work around the mouth on sole so thank you for showing me.cheers terry

  • @chiplane3976
    @chiplane3976 Рік тому

    I had tried to remouth one plane and it was semi-successful. After watching this video, I think I better understand some of the finer points. I will try this again on some of my other planes. Thanks for the information.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Glad it helped! Keep going!

  • @billgeorgene
    @billgeorgene Рік тому

    Graham, you’re a real treasure in a modern woodworking environment. Hand work is slowly disappearing. I would like to see you demonstrate the processes that you describe rather than just talk about them. I think your viewers would be very interested in watching the processes of doing the work as well as hearing about it. In watching, they will learn much from seeing your skills and techniques and become more proficient in their own handwork. Keep these videos coming.

  • @johnsmith-vz3vr
    @johnsmith-vz3vr Рік тому

    Oh, you will become an icon of UA-cam and our wooden universe.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      Just hope I can save a bit of the old knowledge before we all succumb to machines!

  • @GraemePayne1967Marine
    @GraemePayne1967Marine Рік тому

    New subscriber, based on a suggestion in one of Rex Krueger's videos.
    Very interesting that this, the first of your videos I have seen, is about wood-bodied planes. I have several that need some work, I feel a need to be careful with them. I got them from my father, who got them from my grandfather, who was a reasonably well-known woodworker in the area of England he lived in.

  • @johnross278
    @johnross278 Рік тому

    Graham, New to your channel and really liking your stuff, but PLEASE: show us your work, such are excavating--that is why I am watching! thanks.

  • @bobbabcock3847
    @bobbabcock3847 Рік тому

    Outstanding, I have a transitional that will get this treatment, thanks.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      I believe some transitionals have frogs that can be moved foreward....check first, but it would still be a good idea to shoot the sole perfectly flat.

  • @derekcohen1000
    @derekcohen1000 Рік тому

    Hi Graham. It is wonderful to meet you here. Some years ago, when you filled in at a wood show for the late David Charlesworth, I recall others mentioning that you discussed setting a close set chipbreaker to control tear out. In my experience, working with interlocked Australian timbers, a closed up mouth does relatively little to reduce or prevent tear out. Even planing with the grain is not enough since there is reversing grain with which to contend. Closing up a chipbreaker (to around 0.4mm behind the blade's edge) works wonders in this regard. Now this video is all about the size of the mouth, and no mention is made of the chipbreaker. Furthermore, a closed up chipbreaker will be affected negatively by a small mouth (preventing shavings escaping past the leading edge of the chipbreaker). The size of the mouth is also irrelevant when the cutting angle reaches half-pitch (60 degrees). Could you comment here or, better still, respond with a video. Regards from Perth, Australia. Derek

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +2

      You are of course largely right (except that I do in fact mention the chipbreaker at 9.26) and yes, of course, the secret is to adjust the chipbreaker in concert with the size of the mouth. At this point I am endeavouring just to cover some basic principles (my producer is constantly on my case to reduce the amount of information in each episode,) but at some point I will indeed discuss in more detail the niceties you mention, but for the moment I have to build a following. For most people the concept of chipbreaker and small mouth is already a huge discovery. But I promise you I'll get to it. Thanks for watching and especially for your comments.

    • @derekcohen1000
      @derekcohen1000 Рік тому

      @@gjbmunc Thank you Graham. Many will benefit from an explanation and demonstration of the chipbreaker's role and set up. It is a game changer. I look forward to this edition. Regards from Perth, Derek

    • @negaopiroca2766
      @negaopiroca2766 Рік тому

      Your producer is probably not a woodworker... please include the details and also all the making process. Many thanks.

  • @chriskeeble
    @chriskeeble Рік тому +2

    Enjoying your videos. This one is interesting, but it would be great to see another one where you undertake the process not just describe it.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +2

      I'll give it a go....

  • @sethwarner2540
    @sethwarner2540 Рік тому

    Iwould have bee interested in actually SEEING you cut the recess...

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Didn't do it because I have several already done and I need to keep one for students - but I will do it again later as soon as I pick up another wooden plane that needs remouthing.

  • @dahljerald2934
    @dahljerald2934 Рік тому

    Graham, please address why it wouldn't be better to place a piece full width on the plane as opposed to creating a the 5 sided version.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      In my opinion I wouldn't want to mess up the sides of a wooden plane, as for 5-sided that's up to you, pyramid or square would also be fine.

  • @raol635
    @raol635 Рік тому

    Why woodworkers are using that yellow mesure tape. What is special in that.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      Readily available more so than tdaditional folding rules.

  • @chicagodon7112
    @chicagodon7112 Рік тому

    Very informative, but remouthing is pretty intimidating to most amatuer woodworkers. We are afraid to mess up the whole thing. That being said, I guess we can't get good at it until we've tried.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Go for it - it's just wood after all.

  • @johnross278
    @johnross278 Рік тому

    Why didn't you SHOW us the fine shavings your newly mouthed plane can make--you seem to demo only, but we are watching to SEE your work and the results. thanks!

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому

      Sorry, I'll try and include it in a future episode.

  • @LeaughtFox
    @LeaughtFox Рік тому

    I love the video, but I'm curious why you didn't actually fix your plane.

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      Have several already fixed but need this one for in-person classes.

    • @LeaughtFox
      @LeaughtFox Рік тому

      @@gjbmunc Okay, that make sense. There can't be that many old tools to be restored at one time.

  • @allanwright8137
    @allanwright8137 Рік тому

    Great content, wonderful teaching.
    For the videographer; stop the zoomy/swoopy video work - it's pointless and distracting. Especially when your sound source is the camera microphone
    Thank you

    • @gjbmunc
      @gjbmunc  Рік тому +1

      Noted! Plus we have a better mike now and the 'swooping' will be minimized as soon as I can afford more cameramen!