I have one. My late husband had all these planes and tools froths great grandfather some go back to 1938. The stanley 12 is in good shape. I'm selling all this stuff
I'm still only getting a burr that I'm happy with about 50% of the time.. There also seems to be a difference in hardness between the original blade and the replacement. Thanks for the tip and for watching!
@@hillbillychic3933 I could try and explain how but Paul Sellers does a much better job in this video: ruclips.net/video/84QebLrnats/видео.html Also, hardness should be an issue. YMMV
I have one. My late husband had all these planes and tools froths great grandfather some go back to 1938. The stanley 12 is in good shape. I'm selling all this stuff
Have someone knowledgable give you a realistic estimate for what you are selling. Some planes are worth more than others.
Interesting tool
I think so too!
You are right- you didn't sharpen the original correctly. Don't burnish so far (you waaaay overdid it), just a slight angle from the forty-five.
I'm still only getting a burr that I'm happy with about 50% of the time.. There also seems to be a difference in hardness between the original blade and the replacement. Thanks for the tip and for watching!
@@hillbillychic3933 I could try and explain how but Paul Sellers does a much better job in this video: ruclips.net/video/84QebLrnats/видео.html
Also, hardness should be an issue. YMMV