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Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition
Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition
Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition
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Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition

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Hands-on involvement separates the craftsman from the collector. Whether you are an armchair craftsman or a shop dust veteran. you are invited to participate in the process of tool making described in the pages of this book.

You will find tools that can be made for woodworking, by woodworkers, in the wood shop. They are insightful of how tools are made, inviting to be put to use, and worthy of collecting. Explore this world in Making Wooden Tools. With the resources at hand in the wood shop, you can do it.
LanguageEnglish
PublisherBookBaby
Release dateJan 17, 2014
ISBN9780972994798
Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition
Author

John Wilson

John Wilson was born and raised in Sydney, Australia. He is a dual Australian/US citizen and lived in the USA in the 1990s for eight years, six of which were in New York City. During this time, he worked as a mining analyst on Wall Street for global British investment bank SG Warburg and SBC Warburg (now part of UBS Warburg) where he covered US mining companies, including Freeport-McMoRan. Prior to that he worked as a mining engineer in outback Australia. John has an MBA with a major in finance from The Wharton School of the University of Pennsylvania, a BA from the University of Queensland and a BE from the University of Sydney. In 1999, he left the USA as a direct consequence of FBI persecution and currently lives in Sydney with his wife and two children.

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  • Rating: 5 out of 5 stars
    5/5
    I own the hardcover edition of this book and recommend it highly. John Wilson has written this engaging guide to making traditional hand tools. Hand planes of many types, a spokeshave and travisher, and a frame saw are detailed--as are some other edge tools. His methods are simple and direct. He even goes into what many consider to be the arcane subject of heat-treating tool steel so it can retain an edge. You could do this in your home workshop.
    Another wonderful book that I would recommend as a companion to this one is Tool-Making Projects for Joinery and Woodworking by Steve A. Olefin. You can make a whole workshop of tools for yourself!


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Making Wood Tools - 2nd Edition - John Wilson

Copyright

Preface

Restoring our tool making heritage involves both design and construction of the tool body as well as the making of the blade. This book takes the mystery out of both. Those familiar with the First Edition will find modification to several tools as well as the addition of new ones. The hand adze is improved with added head weight and the spokeshave with a sole plate to protect from wear.

The new shoulder plane lends itself to a mortising plane for hinge gains, a rabbeting plane, and molding hollows and rounds. The simplicity of construction commends it as an undertaking early in your tool making venture into these specialty activities. The large compass plane builds on the scrub plane platform to give you the ability to hollow a Windsor chair seat or similar indent. And if you want a first project in using dimensional tool steel look no farther than the carving and layout knife.

Using O1 dimensional tool steel is new ground for many woodworkers. The availability of a variety of dimensions at reasonable cost is the beginning. Knowing about heat treating is what makes it useful. It is reassuring to learn that O1 tool steel remains as fine a steel as any available for the woodworker. The following is a conversation with a knife maker:

In SEM monographs comparing the grain structure of popular knife steels, O1 had the finest grain structure by far. In practical terms it means the O1 can be made sharper than other steels. Other steels have larger carbides and can make an edge that lasts longer in terms of wear, but can never be as sharp. Another attribute of O1 is that heat treating has more latitude and is easier to get good performance out of low tech processing.

The path to a fine tool can take many routes. What you will find here is my encounter with shop made tools:

Using means of construction readily available in the wood shop

Breaking down the construction into understandable steps

Simplifying each step to ensure success

Having the journey give you ownership in the fullest sense of a tool you can use.

The Home Shop

P.S. Besides new projects like the Carving & Layout Knife shown below (see page 142), check out using table salt to sand the glue line to prevent clamping slippage on page 11.

Introduction

The projects in this book represent tools you can make. These are not the electric stationary or portable tools prominent in most shops in the 21st century. They are the legacy of the 18th- and 19th-century craftsmen that are being rediscovered by woodworkers today. While the majority of my day is spent with a fractional horsepower electric motor in my hand or turned on before me at a saw, my life in wood is immeasurably enriched by knowing about these tools and knowing where to reach for them when the task calls for it.

Tools represent a state of mind. Their use and range of application depend on the skill of the hands that reach for them and put them to use. Whenever you see an application for another tool, that is the time to make or buy it. This is more than collecting. It is using the tools of the trade.

Don’t balk at the price of a hand tool. For some reason we think they should be cheaper than their power equivalent and yet hand tools last immeasurably longer. My grandfather’s hand tools are as good and useful today as they were in the 1860s when he learned to use them.

By the 1960s much of this legacy had been lost to Americans, both the mindset to use hand tools and the sources of supply where they could be found. It is one of the success stories of woodworking in our lifetime that this trend was reversed. Forums for good information were started and two of the first were Fine Woodworking (1975) and WoodenBoat (1974). I remember the first time I received the Garrett Wade catalog. What a feast for the eye and an invitation to explore. Two catalog sources from hand tool designers and manufacturers are very much alive today and come out of this revival: Lie-Nielsen Toolworks (lie-nielsen.com) and Lee Valley Tools/Veritas (leevalley.com). One of the individuals responsible for teaching Americans about their heritage, Tage Frid, is found in The Home Shop Workbench on page 176.

Magazines, books, film, schools, and wood shows have proliferated in the period since the beginning of this tool revival. It is said that wood working ranks along with gardening, cooking, and reading as America’s favorite pastimes. Magazines like Popular Woodworking Magazine, American Woodworker and Wood serve their interests and serve them well. Ernie Conover, Marc Adams, and Kelly Mehler come to mind as individuals whose knowledge and passion for fine woodworking and tools have led to opening schools. The Home Shop, my own business for supplying craftsmen with oval box supplies, holds classes where all of the tools featured here have been taught, and whose students served as proving ground for what you read.

So why make your own tools? Some do it to save money. Others for the challenge to learn how. I would add that a tool is more than itself, it is a mindset. This makes tool making an enlightening experience, and a legacy to give your grandchildren.

1

Making Planes & Other Tools

Block Plane

Chisel Plane

Compass Plane

Jack Plane

Shoulder Plane

Molding Plane

Scrub Plane

Large Compass Plane

Smoothing Plane

Spokeshave

Router Plane

Travisher

Hand Adze

Shop Drawknife

Scrapers

Cabinetmaker’s Bow Saw

Carving & Layout Knife

Block Plane

The block plane is a good place to start. It is the first woodworking tool for which I can claim ownership. I don’t mean ownership in laying out money, but tool ownership of acquired proficiency. After leaving high school I hired on as a carpenter. The uniform was a baggy white coverall with bib and suspender front, ample pockets including a ruler slot at the hip, and a nail apron across the waist. The tools of the trade were a 20 oz. Estwing curved claw hammer slung in a canvas loop in the coverall, an 8″ Stanley square which we called a handy-dandy tucked into the ruler slot and used for a myriad of tasks that would make a tool purist flinch, a Lufkin 6′ folding rule with sliding brass extension for inside measurements, and a block plane. It resided in the nail apron and was employed for everything from chamfering a shelf board to making a door fit. If a tool is an object to solve a problem, and a wood tool is a way to work wood, then the block plane became my introduction to the world of hand tools.

WOOD BLOCK PLANE

MATERIALS

Block Plane Design

A plane is a frame, wooden or metal, for holding a blade much like a chisel. It fits comfortably in hand at a fixed angle for removing shavings from wood. Wood grain runs differently along the side and across the end of a board. The block plane is spoken of as being the tool of choice for working, or blocking, end grain. It does that, and so much more. Being the right size for single handed operation, it gets employed for chamfering edges either side or end grain. For ease of long strokes the length of a board its big brother planes come into play, but the block plane is handy, and kept sharp will serve the craftsman well.

There are several types of block planes sold today. Stanley has two versions of a metal block plane: the standard, No. 9½, and the low angle No. 60½. The low angle block plane is ¼″ narrower as well as having a blade bedded to cut at a lower angle of attack as its name implies. The standard angle of a plane blade is 45° which experience has shown to be best for general work. Two attributes of blade angle are ease of operation and smoothness of cut. The first relates to the effort needed to do the planing, the second to the presence of any tear-out of wood fiber on the surface. As a blade is lowered it gets easier to push; as it gets steeper it does a smoother job. Hence, smoothing planes will have a blade angle of 52° or 55° or more rather than the standard 45°.

Bezel Up or Down

At first glance, the metal-bodied block planes, either standard or low angle, will appear to be much lower than a bench plane. This is deceptive due to the change in how the blade is placed. The blade’s bezel, or bevel angle, in a metal-bodied block plane is up, while other planes have theirs turned down. It is the angle of approach rather than the angle of the whole blade that counts. It is the metal frame of the plane that allows the manufacturer to turn over the blade giving it a lower, and handier profile whether standard or low angle. In the illustrations on page 6, the blade is sharpened at a 25° bevel.

The wood-bodied plane, whether a bench plane or a small block plane, has the blade bezel down. This is because the wood frame can not be shimmed down in the bedding angle as is possible in a metal casting. It is still a small handy tool, but not as much as the low angle Stanley No. 60½ which remains in a class by itself.

FOUR BLOCK PLANES. Stanley Model No. 9½ (middle) with standard blade angle and No. 60½ (bottom) low angle version. The wood-bodied E. C. Emmerich Co. (top right) and the shop-made model (top left) both have standard 45° angle of blade with the blade bevel down rather than up as the metal-bodied block planes do.

STANLEY NO. 9½ Blade angle 20° plus bezel 25° = 45° Angle of Approach

STANLEY NO. 60½ Blade angle 13° plus bezel 25° = 38° Angle of Approach

WOOD-BODIED BLOCK PLANE Blade angle 45° = 45° Angle of Approach

Teaching Block Plane Making

Not only was the block plane the first tool for which I could claim ownership, but it was the first plane I saw being made in a class. I credit Adolph Peschke for showing me this project. The father of Woodsmith editor Don Peschke taught classes in plane making at their family store in St. Louis. I was there to teach oval box making and learned from Adolph. The class has been the flagship event in plane making at the Home Shop since 1987. It set the pattern for every project to follow where students do both the plane construction as well as blade making. Being able to make your own blade gives versatility to project design as well as being a great learning experience.

A wood-bodied plane uses materials and methods you can do in the shop. In this regard it echoes the experience of apprentices for generations in learning their trade, and acquiring the tools needed to be a journeyman. The proportions of the block plane design are similar to the beautifully crafted Primus plane made in Germany and sold by the ECE Company. It also is based on a three-piece body which allows for accurate cutting of blade rest and fore angles that otherwise require difficult chiseling operations in a solid block. The use of a walnut core block and contrasting Birdseye maple cheek pieces introduces a striking appearance. From a durability standpoint, an all-maple body would be more serviceable, as wood-bodied planes do wear on the sole and require periodic resurfacing if given extended use.

Making the Blade

The blade is made from an O1 tool steel blank ⅛ × 1½″ × 3½″. This steel is very serviceable, easily worked in shop conditions (meaning the heat treatment tolerances are forgiving of the imprecise methods we have available) and produces a finished blade as good as any. While other alloys are touted in the market, one well-known producer of plane blades said in conversation that O1 would be his preference for a plane iron intended for this project. The steel is sold in 18″ and 36″ lengths at a reasonable cost of $3 per blade. It comes annealed, meaning softer than what results from heat treatment, so shaping and beveling can be accomplished, as well as drilling blades used in the chisel plane described next.

Grinding the blade blank begins with rounding the top end to be comfortable in your hand. I call this style a tombstone end. The bezel or bevel cutting end is ground to an angle of 25°. Leave off grinding while a small flat remains (¹/64″) so that the feathered edge will not become carbon starved in heat treatment. Use the belt sander with 80-grit belt to level the bezel. The advantage is the flat surface and control possible with this tool. CAUTION: Sparks can ignite wood dust so clean your work area first. The sander is also used to ease the edges of the sides and tombstone end.

Everyone is fascinated with fire. The bezel end of the blade needs to be heated to 1,450° F to 1,600° F which renders the steel a glowing cherry red. This is a color as seen in the dim interior of the old blacksmith’s forge, so be cautious in bright sunlight where it might be overdone. Only a band a half-inch wide at the end need be brought to this temperature. The use of a double tin can used as a heat shield, or elemental furnace, can help get an even glow to the blade end when using a propane or MAPP gas torch which may be more accessible than the intense heat of an acetylene torch used by welders. In either case, the blade when hot is quenched in oil, the whole of the blade immediately submerged in one stroke to avoid warping the blade if dipped slowly, also flame will surround the hot steel at the surface where oxygen can ignite the oil. (Read the section on Tool Steel & Blade Making, pages 150-157.)

The realignment of the molecular structure produces a blade very hard, yet brittle. Drop a blade at this stage and it is likely to chip. I have had one flake similar to that seen at the edge of glass. To achieve a useful balance between hardness and toughness, the blade is tempered. This involves heating the blade in an oven and holding it for 20 minutes at 350° F to 400° F. This results in an edge with a Rockwell hardness of 60-62 (in contrast to the brittle hard 65 to 70 or the annealed 45) which can hold an edge without chipping.

The final sharpening will bring your blade making to an end. Lap the back to ensure it is straight and smooth at the cutting edge. The entire blade can be polished, or left with heat treating colors and slight roughness that can help secure the blade when wedged. Imprint name and date on your creation.

TOOL STEEL IS HEATED to cherry red using a torch and tin can furnace to focus heat. Quench in oil to make it hard and brittle. CAUTION: Tin can gets hot. Keep away from flammable surfaces.

TEMPERING IN OVEN and holding at 400° F for 20 minutes and cooling slowly will restore needed toughness. Polish and sharpen cutter, but leave reverse side rough to help hold securely in plane.

CORE BLOCK

Wood Plane Body

While all this working with fire and grinding, sharpening and heat treatment is going on, the class I teach is also working on the wood plane body. The three-piece body is the key to success for the new toolmaker. Making an inside square hole with a variety of angles is not for beginners, or anyone with the time constraint of a one day tool class. Follow the plan for cutting the core block. Draw the bedding angle 45° and fore angle 65° from a point 2¼″ from the front end. This is cut and sanded being sure that the bedding surface especially is flat and square. Save the triangle scrap which will become the heel of the body later. The fore block receives a ¼″ wide flat at 90° on the disc sander.

Glue-up of the plane body is accomplished using a thin board ¼″ × 1⅞″ × 6″ to keep all pieces aligned. Draw two lines across this board at 2″ and 2⁵/16″ to show where the throat opening comes. The appropriate size of the opening of the mouth is a factor of two opposing conditions. Having the sole close to the blade helps prevent tear-out, while having a mouth too small creates a jamb. The trade-off of these two factors results in an opening that varies from plane maker to plane maker. I believe that the evidence for a very tight mouth being significant in smoothness of cut is unclear. At the same time I know for a fact that a jamb of shavings is a pain.

THE CORE BLOCK IS CUT for the throat opening: 65° forward and 45° for blade angle. The intersect of angles is 2¼″ from front of the core block. The salvage cut from the throat gives you the piece for the heel block.

THE THREE-PIECE BODY allows for accuracy. The bedding angle shown here is being sanded flat and square to the sides.

Wax the alignment board to prevent glue from adhering. Clamp the fore and bed blocks to the board. Set the cheek pieces alongside the core blocks and lightly pencil the throat opening so you can avoid spreading glue here. Holding the sides in position with a small clamp, drill ³/16″ holes ½″ deep through sides into middle of both core blocks. See photo showing this operation for accurately drilling these small pins. When all is ready, glue all surfaces (avoiding throat opening) and drive pins.

AN ALIGNMENT BOARD ensures that core blocks are in the right place. Mark ⁵/16″ throat opening, then wax the board to prevent glue from sticking.

Clamp pressure can be in your bench vise or you can use four clamps. If you use a bench vise, be sure alignment board and dowel pins do not interfere with clamping pressure. Before glue sets hard, clear out any glue beads from the throat.

The sole and top surfaces are sanded flat and square to the sides. The ends are sanded on a slight arc. Next, sand a chamfer around the top surface and all four corners as shown in the photo of the plane body on page 10. A nice touch is a finger indent in the fore block made with a router core bit chucked into the drill press. Finally, the heel block is made from the throat salvage piece and glued to the bed block leaving ¼″ space behind the opening so a hammer can tap the blade.

The wedge is cut at an 8° to 10° angle, any steeper and it pops out under pressure. Bevel the lower end for shavings and carve a crease near the top for ease in removing. The ⅜″ dowel used

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