Can I cut a block plane iron down to fit ?

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Mr_P

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Bought myself a weird user made plane on ebay and it works amazingly well considering its a bevel down with no cap iron.

Iron's a bit short so had a look on ebay found a few contenders in 1 1/4" size but they look a bit thick.

So thinking of attacking a block plane iron with a hacksaw.

Will that work or should I just be patient and wait for something more suitable to come along ?
 
Bristol Design has a large stock of shoulder plane irons, cut down from bench plane irons, either side of the slot. They even have a stock of offcuts! So it must be possible.

I suspect that a decent iron would ruin your hacksaw blade, so you might need to either soften/saw/reharden or else use some sort of metal cutting blade in an angle grinder. On a small scale, the little cut-off wheels in a Dremel should be worth a try.
 
You don't say what the plane configuration is. post some pictures, please. I love to see successful user made planes.

Trying to hacksaw hardened tool steel is going to be a dead end exercise. If what you need to do is make a blade a little narrower, a bench grinder will be the way to go. If you need a more complex shape you may be better off starting with new steel and making the blade from scratch.
 
Hardened steel can be cut, but not with a hacksaw! I think you have to grind it, a cutting disc is effectively a very narrow grinding wheel.

Yes you can soften the blade so you can use a hacksaw and then reheat,quench and temper , but I think if you're going to do that, you might as well start off with a bit of new tool steel and make it from scratch.
 
Thin cut-off disk in an angle-grinder will walk through it. But it might be wise to do it in stages and allow to cool regularly. Anything that cuts that quickly generates a lot of heat.
 
Thanks all, will have a bash with a Dremel copy. No angle grinder, under the illusion I'm a woodworker but some days think I've taken up metal work by mistake.

Will report back with pictures.
 
I cut an iron for my scrub plane using an angle grinder. I clamped it between two thick bits of angle iron to act as a heatsink and guide, with the waste protruding. It worked, but in this case I used M3 HSS, so a lot less likely to lose temper.
 
Thanks to AndyT, Lidl/Parkside and all the above for the suggestions I'm sorted now.

Apologies to the mods I did start out with good hand tool intentions but was talked out of it.

Steps 1, scatch a line into the big iron,cut a rebate into a bit of scrap and clamp into place.

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actually first step, should be sweep up, sparks and shavings not a good idea.

Step 2, Attack with Dremel, wear goggles or even better a full face guard. Sparks plus the dremel disc grinders can break into dozens of tiny projectiles.

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Slow work, taking care not to get it too hot and stopping to replace either worn down or shattered mini grinder discs.

I swapped the clamp to an old iron, thinking it would be a better heat sink and protect the business end.

Tada I'm through
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Step 3, Clean up the cut, I used my parkside belt sander. Once again take care not to overheat, at least when its not clamped I could dunk it easily in a mug of water so a lot quicker.

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Step 4, quick sharpen and test

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No where near as good as it was, iron needs a bit more work.

Lessons learned, before I would do this again.

I need a face mask and a bit of blue metal die or similar, maybe I'll try a black marker it was easy to see the line on the black end but not the shiny end.
 

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