Makes for a nice detail along the inside of an edge, cool!
How carefully do you need to read the grain to minimize tear-out? Seems cutting the wrong direction could quickly tell you, but I don't know if your cutter angle is such that that is a non-issue.
SplinterGroup... with all Moulding planes reading grain direction is very important. Always with the grain is a pretty much a requirement. However a very sharp honed blade will work well in those situations where you can't help going against the grain. Another requirement especially with any curved profile is to have the blade cut on a "spring line". This way the profile curve or shape is cut little at a time with each pass until you reach completed profile. Having a "stop" IMO is mandatory so over cutting doesn't happen and you know when you're done. The plane tells you. Hope I explained okay.
Amazing work Rick, this is one sweet beading plane. Very nice, very nice indeed. I think Lazyman was questioning the boxing on this plane with his fragile comment. What wood did you use for the boxing? PS: I like the look of the sliding dovetail joint, nice and tight. Great work.
Lazyman I am seeing it right? The sides on the beaded groove you show of the underside look like would be pretty fragile.
Lazyman... it is very important to choose the right wood for the boxing. This is what that piece is made of for strength. Also notice the points have a small flat which negates breakage. So far so good!
Oldtool Amazing work Rick, this is one sweet beading plane. Very nice, very nice indeed. I think Lazyman was questioning the boxing on this plane with his fragile comment. What wood did you use for the boxing? PS: I like the look of the sliding dovetail joint, nice and tight. Great work.
Thank you Oldtool!! It is very sweet. Cuts a bead in no time. And it's very smooth! I used Dogwood for the boxing. The Janka hardness rating for dogwood is 2150 lbf, indicating its relatively high hardness. This places it among the harder North American hardwoods. Way harder than Maple. Boxwood is harder but I didn't have any. Regardless... Dogwood does nicely. I like doing sliding dovetails to join two different kinds of wood. Glad you like it! 👍
I can't express enough how satisfying it is to make a couple of passes and see how smooth the bead turns out when finished. And the sound "shhhhhh - shhhhh" is so sweet! Ya gotta love it!
Thanks GeorgeWest! I'm not sure what makes a full set but this one makes 11 moulding planes I've made now. I'm fact.. I'm making another box. Each box holds 8.
Splint, you could theoretically go up to cabinet pitch (60 degree) or higher, but when you are making mouldings you would specifically pick straight grained pieces to make it simpler to get a crisp moulding, although you can use a hollow/round if you hit a bit of twitchy grain and need to plane in the opposite direction.
I thought seeing lots of planes all, have makers marks. I think you should show it. Be nice to see.
Petey... I use some letter punches that I bought from Lee Valley. I punch my first initial and last name on the heel. Many past makers punched their marks on the toe but there are also many who did so on the heel. I prefer the heel because if spring lines are added on the toe where they always go then placing a makers mark on the toe would be an issue.