My Latest Toy

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jsburger
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My Latest Toy

Post by jsburger »

Lie-Nielsen had one of their hand tool events in Salt Lake City last weekend. Last year was the first time they had ever been to Salt Lake and they came back this year. Hopefully it will be an annual event. They bring a large assortment of their hand tools that you can try. There are company experts to answer all your questions. They also have local craftsmen and some not local. This year they had Russ Filbeck a retired US Navy Submariner turned master chair maker. He made a chair for President Jimmy Carter who is himself a chair maker. I was able to purchase his book "Making Ladder Back Chairs", which he signed, at a nice discount. You can read all about him on his web site.

http://www.russfilbeck.com

I have always wanted to do more with hand tools so I thought I would get a decent plane. I have had a Lie-Nielsen rabbeting block plane for years and love it. The consensus is for a first plane or an only plane the low angle jack plane is the one. It can do just about everything most of the other styles can do. So I bought a Lie-Nielsen No. 62 low angle jack plane. I think most people would agree that Lie-Nielsen makes one of the best planes on the market. You can certainly spend way more money from the hand made custom makers but I doubt they work any better.
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John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
ERLover
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by ERLover »

So St Nick came a week early. :D Nice John.
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts :D :D :D :D :D :D
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them. :)
Gene Howe
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by Gene Howe »

That's just plane sweet.
ERLover
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by ERLover »

JB,
you just bought that in anticipation of Dustys post about your non traditional shop.LOL :D
Remember John, there is no dust collector hooked to it, and IT WILL put shavings on your floor. :eek:
KNOWLEDGE AND EXPERIENCE EQUALS WISDOM. Albert Einstein
The Greatness officially starts :D :D :D :D :D :D
Greenie, Grayling, SS stand alone BS and BS SPT, jointer and belt sander, 3 Ers with Speed Changers. I think those 3 cover my ER needs, and space for them. :)
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jsburger
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by jsburger »

ERLover wrote:JB,
you just bought that in anticipation of Dustys post about your non traditional shop.LOL :D
Remember John, there is no dust collector hooked to it, and IT WILL put shavings on your floor. :eek:
Yeh, but there is no dust with a hand plane. It cuts ribbons so thin that you can see through them and as long as the piece you are planing. No "dust" to get all over the place without a sucker.
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
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algale
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by algale »

Nice looking plane!

And thanks for the backstory and link to the Russ Filbeck site -- great looking chairs (although I think the one Charlese built for his daughter looks just as good as any of these).
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!

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jsburger
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by jsburger »

algale wrote:Nice looking plane!

And thanks for the backstory and link to the Russ Filbeck site -- great looking chairs (although I think the one Charlese built for his daughter looks just as good as any of these).
The interesting thing that he explained is the technique to put them together without glue. How the different parts either quarter sawn or flat sawn. Not that the parts are actually sawn but the way they are shaped with a draw knife and a spoke shave in the correct grain direction. The legs and back are green wood and the rungs are dry. The tenons on the rungs have circular grove near the end. When the chair is put together the legs dry and shrink and the rungs pick up moisture from the legs and swell. The legs have to be shaped in the correct grain direction so they don't split when everything dries. The result is a locked joint that lasts almost forever without glue. That is the way it was done in the 1800's and early 1900's.

BTW, he uses a draw horse like Roy Underhill to make his parts.
John & Mary Burger
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algale
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by algale »

jsburger wrote:
The interesting thing that he explained is the technique to put them together without glue. How the different parts either quarter sawn or flat sawn. Not that the parts are actually sawn but the way they are shaped with a draw knife and a spoke shave in the correct grain direction. The legs and back are green wood and the rungs are dry. The tenons on the rungs have circular grove near the end. When the chair is put together the legs dry and shrink and the rungs pick up moisture from the legs and swell. The legs have to be shaped in the correct grain direction so they don't split when everything dries. The result is a locked joint that lasts almost forever without glue. That is the way it was done in the 1800's and early 1900's.

BTW, he uses a draw horse like Roy Underhill to make his parts.
Those are some interesting points. It sounds like a good read. Might have to get a copy.
Gale's Law: The bigger the woodworking project, the less the mistakes show in any photo taken far enough away to show the entire project!

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jsburger
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by jsburger »

algale wrote:
jsburger wrote:
The interesting thing that he explained is the technique to put them together without glue. How the different parts either quarter sawn or flat sawn. Not that the parts are actually sawn but the way they are shaped with a draw knife and a spoke shave in the correct grain direction. The legs and back are green wood and the rungs are dry. The tenons on the rungs have circular grove near the end. When the chair is put together the legs dry and shrink and the rungs pick up moisture from the legs and swell. The legs have to be shaped in the correct grain direction so they don't split when everything dries. The result is a locked joint that lasts almost forever without glue. That is the way it was done in the 1800's and early 1900's.

BTW, he uses a draw horse like Roy Underhill to make his parts.
Those are some interesting points. It sounds like a good read. Might have to get a copy.
He has a picture in his book of someone sitting on the porch and leaning back on the back legs of the chair against the wall. He said he has seen some chairs that had the back legs worn down almost to the rung because that is the way they were always used . A testament to the joinery. My wife laughed, she is from Mississippi and said yes my parents had the same chairs back in the 50's.
John & Mary Burger
Eagle's Lair Woodshop
Hooper, UT
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nuhobby
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Re: My Latest Toy

Post by nuhobby »

Don't worry; you won't get addicted (NOT!) ....

Talk about dust vs. shavings. I had one plane that sharpened really nicely. I was pulling sweet shavings off a plank of butternut. These long shavings went in to the DC3300 and got caught in the impeller area, making the dust-collector quite noisy!

I love a plane with all its curved lines on the body. I'm restoring an old Stanley and even my wife liked the new knob I turned on my PowerPro:
D_Ironwood_Knob.jpg
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You've got a beauty there with that Lie-Nielsen!

Chris
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