Question for anyone who may have ever taken apart an old Spiers coffin shaped infill: is the rear infill two pieces (stacked on top of each other) or one?
I got a bit of a beater a couple of weeks ago, and it's cracked in the middle of the rear infill right where the wood meets the metal. I'm assuming that this is due to one of two things:
1) the wood was two pieces to start with. I think that's doubtful, but could be. The wood is too dark for me to tell if there is grain continuation, and that's no guarantee of wood being one piece, anyway.
2) the wood cracks because as it shrinks, it's retained in the metallic parts by peened in rods, and eventually it's broken as the bottom part shrinks and stays with the rods and gets pulled away from the top.
That may not make sense unless you've looked at these planes. It seems that more than half of the dovetailed coffin shaped infills have a crack right at the top of the metal parts in the back, and the crack goes from one side to the other.
I'm thinking of filling mine to see if I can make it disappear (out of curiosity), but it will reappear with seasonal change, I'm sure. It's only a hairline.
The plane in question is a prior ebay item 292099964855, but the seller didn't disclose the crack, and probably didn't know to. I am by no means complaining because they made their main picture a photo of the cap iron only and ended up getting little for the plane (97 quid), plus it's got a fair amount of pitting that I will remove - a perfect candidate for the kind of cleaning I normally don't do.
Since I have no picture of it, I attached another one that I found courtesy of google image. Same crack, same place, different plane.
We have just about zero supply of decent infill planes for cheap over here in the states. I guess there's other things that we do have, but the UK is a far better place to go for:
* record planes
* any 4 1/2 or 604 1/2
* run of the mill (but very functional) infills
* century-old tang chisels of an english type pattern
Tangent over - question in bold is really the only question.
I got a bit of a beater a couple of weeks ago, and it's cracked in the middle of the rear infill right where the wood meets the metal. I'm assuming that this is due to one of two things:
1) the wood was two pieces to start with. I think that's doubtful, but could be. The wood is too dark for me to tell if there is grain continuation, and that's no guarantee of wood being one piece, anyway.
2) the wood cracks because as it shrinks, it's retained in the metallic parts by peened in rods, and eventually it's broken as the bottom part shrinks and stays with the rods and gets pulled away from the top.
That may not make sense unless you've looked at these planes. It seems that more than half of the dovetailed coffin shaped infills have a crack right at the top of the metal parts in the back, and the crack goes from one side to the other.
I'm thinking of filling mine to see if I can make it disappear (out of curiosity), but it will reappear with seasonal change, I'm sure. It's only a hairline.
The plane in question is a prior ebay item 292099964855, but the seller didn't disclose the crack, and probably didn't know to. I am by no means complaining because they made their main picture a photo of the cap iron only and ended up getting little for the plane (97 quid), plus it's got a fair amount of pitting that I will remove - a perfect candidate for the kind of cleaning I normally don't do.
Since I have no picture of it, I attached another one that I found courtesy of google image. Same crack, same place, different plane.
We have just about zero supply of decent infill planes for cheap over here in the states. I guess there's other things that we do have, but the UK is a far better place to go for:
* record planes
* any 4 1/2 or 604 1/2
* run of the mill (but very functional) infills
* century-old tang chisels of an english type pattern
Tangent over - question in bold is really the only question.