3-Arm Kerfing Plane #1: Introduction

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This is part 1 in a 8 part series: 3-Arm Kerfing Plane

  1. Introduction
  2. Bear Saw
...
  1. Blade cover

I will keep this blog entry brief (in case the baby wakes up and I have to run).

I have been working on a new kerfing plane. For background on what a kerfing plane is, see Tom Fidgen, though we are going much further. Like there are plow planes and then there are 3-arm plow planes, I am making a 3-arm kerfing plane. I started working on it Sep 7, 2021 and it is currently Jan 1, 2023. That means that at the time of this writing, I have been working on my patent 3-arm kerfing plane for over a year (almost 16 months now).

The design considerations became so overwhelming that I developed a new method of design for keeping all the parts and cuts accounted for. This ultimately resulted in a design canvas that is now currently, if I printed it on paper at 1:1 scale, 12-feet wide by 6-feet tall. Everything from the tiniest of screws, thumb nuts, knurled knobs, and brass rod inlay, right on up to the full-size Stanley plane tote integrated into the body of the plane as a single piece of 8/4 waterfall Bubinga.

I have selected lumber for 2 prototypes and finalized all the parts for each individual unit as-though they were kits I bought from somewhere, but assembled into little parts baggies myself and then put those bags into a larger bag. Everything is labeled and there is even a "ghost bag" containing slips of paper describing what I need to restock for each unit.

I have circled back to the designs to double-check that the physically stocked lumber and dimensioned blanks match the template dimensions. I painstakingly rejected multiple rounds of Gaboon Ebony that exhibited voids after hand dimensioning attempts.

We are in-essence "Go" for the first prototype.

In the coming parts of this blog series, I will go over each aspect in-detail as we work toward the 2023 manifestation of a tool that does more than any kerfing plane, stair saw, or similar hand-tool with a saw attached to it has ever done before. We are talking about kerf-bending, cross-cuts, grooving, dados, cuts referencing an edge, cuts referencing a face, cuts referencing a guide edge clamped in the middle of a board, ... if you can think it up, you can probably do it with this 3-arm kerfing plane equipped with 2 micro-adjustable fences and a micro-adjustable saw depth, and reversible 2-sided blade with both cross-cut and rip teeth. I went crazy on this one, because I have a small shop, lots of neighbors, I hate paying the electric bill, I like working with my hands, and I want a really cool tool to hand down to my kid that has our family name emblazoned on it.

And I'm giving it away for free.
wow this has been a long journey dev and been fun following along since the beginning. the detail and thought youve put into this has been truly amazing. i love people with a passion and take the time no matter how long to do something the way they feel is right. im glad youve brought the project here to your and my new home. cant wait for the assembly to unfold.

working with my hands is a joy,it gives me a sense of fulfillment,somthing so many seek and so few find.-SAM MALOOF.

Thanks pottz! It's a new year and I am feeling invigorated!
Looking forward to reading this series!

Ryan/// ~sigh~ I blew up another bowl. Moke told me "I made the inside bigger than the outside".

Keep up the good work Devin.

Main Street to the Mountains

 I will keep this blog entry brief (in case the baby wakes up and I have to run). 
If the baby wakes... I really thing you should attend and not run (away)!

If your first cut is too short... Take the second cut from the longer end... LBD

unless it's a baby.............DUCK !!!!!!!

working with my hands is a joy,it gives me a sense of fulfillment,somthing so many seek and so few find.-SAM MALOOF.

Interesting reading about something I have heard mention of for what seems like a long time. Keep on keeping on.