Old Hand Planes


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The Stanley Handyman is unfortunately not worth a lot of money and I think the other plane is a made in England Stanley or a late model USA Stanley, neither of which are of a desired vintage if you will.

 

They could make decent users though the Handyman might be a bit of an uphill climb from a fettling perspective.

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The Stanley Handyman is unfortunately not worth a lot of money and I think the other plane is a made in England Stanley or a late model USA Stanley, neither of which are of a desired vintage if you will.

That could make decent users though the Handyman might be a bit of an uphill climb from a fettling perspective.

im not trying to sell as much as I want too but they were my grandfather's!
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If they were my grandfathers I,would clean them up a bit and put them on a shelf.

i want to clean them up and display them but also get them functioning so I can use them on special projects.

It looks like they are a no. 4 smoother and a no. 5 jack. I used the website referenced above to determine that.

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Yes, sharpen them up and use them.

 

I just bought a Stanley #4, probably 25 years old, maybe a little older, and not worth more than the twenty bucks I gave the guy who Craigslisted it.

 

But the blade was OK and so was the rest.  I cleaned it up, got it scary sharp with the stones and compound, and it cuts .003 shavings nicely.

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Yes, sharpen them up and use them.

I just bought a Stanley #4, probably 25 years old, maybe a little older, and not worth more than the twenty bucks I gave the guy who Craigslisted it.

But the blade was OK and so was the rest. I cleaned it up, got it scary sharp with the stones and compound, and it cuts .003 shavings nicely.

I am going to call around to our granite shops and see if anyone has a cut off piece I can have to flatten the sole. I may buy new Hock blades pending the cost of them.
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I am going to call around to our granite shops and see if anyone has a cut off piece I can have to flatten the sole. I may buy new Hock blades pending the cost of them.

Spray adhesive, Table saw top and sandpaper!   Why go buy stuff you have already handy?

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Watch some Paul Sellars videos on YouTube.  He shows how to sharpen blades and tune the tool.

 

Also watch WoodMan's video where he sure gets a  workout flattening a sole.

 

See what kind of performance you get from the blades you have before buying Hocks.  I have Hock blades in Krenov-style wood planes I made, but all my iron planes have stock blades.

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Let Paul Sellars show you how. A piece of granite tile from the store, some sandpaper, and there you go.

Paul is not a purist, but instead is a true woodworker. The work done to ease the edges is important.

do you know of anymore videos of his that he works on that number 4 plane? I don't know anything about planes or how to operate them.
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