Vic Tesolin - Planes for difficult grain

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  • Опубликовано: 12 сен 2024
  • Part 3 of Vic Tesolin's visit to the Peter Sefton Furniture School on his UK tour. In this section he looks at scraping planes and low angled planes from the Veritas range.
    To buy any of the items included in the video visit
    www.woodworker...
    Visit Peter Sefton Furniture School for details on courses
    www.petersefto...

Комментарии • 11

  • @wolfa5151
    @wolfa5151 5 лет назад +1

    Amazingly informative sessions. Whow, am I glad I came across them. And Vic T, what a charming, pleasant, ultra knowledgable guy! Thanks Vic T. And thanks Veritas, best brand on the planet!

  • @samtemple3182
    @samtemple3182 5 лет назад +4

    I thought Vic was great fun. I’m a beginner to woodworking and it was refreshing to hear about not being too obsessed with measuring and angles. Which is something that’s always worried me. Thanks Vic and thanks to Peter for these great videos

    • @WoodWorkersWorkshopLimited
      @WoodWorkersWorkshopLimited 5 лет назад +2

      Vic is an excellent and entertaining demonstrator, enjoy your woodworking adventure, cheers Peter

  • @murraypotts924
    @murraypotts924 5 лет назад +2

    Thanks Vic, I live in Western Australia working with local hardwoods, jarrah, blackbut, wondoo, tuart and peppermint the latter two have serious interlocking grain. What you said in part 2 about Australian hardwoods is more so when it comes to Western Australian local wood. I have a full arsenal of Veritas bevel-up planes and love them because I can play with bevel angles. For tuart and peppermint I use a toothed blade and finish with a cabinet scrapper, I have just now ordered the scraper plane.

  • @TheSMEAC
    @TheSMEAC Год назад

    The only significant difference I experience is that camber on a bevel up is not even in the same county code as a cambered iron on a bevel down.

  • @МихаилКмита
    @МихаилКмита 4 года назад

    Да конечно интересно. Лучше страдания, что не прет.

  • @soberlivingwithbrianfrankl8254
    @soberlivingwithbrianfrankl8254 5 лет назад +2

    Drinking game, take a shot every time he says "right" lol

    • @TheSMEAC
      @TheSMEAC 3 года назад +1

      I know, right? 😂

    • @ahikernamedgq
      @ahikernamedgq 3 года назад +1

      Stone drunk as of 0:45.

  • @daw162
    @daw162 6 лет назад +2

    It's a shame that he can't learn to use the cap iron and literally do all of this with a single plane.
    And teach people to do it, too.
    I recall the early part of my woodworking hobby when I thought "look at all of these things I will acquire so that I can handle the various situations with soft and hard wood and end grain and long grain and figured and not".
    None of these planes are necessary, except the low angle planes are arguably nice to have if you are going to be doing a lot of end grain work.
    The trouble with them is they are literally less useful to a skilled user than a typical bailey pattern plane.
    I am a huge fan of Veritas, but not this idea that this approach is somehow productive.

    • @spayced
      @spayced 3 года назад +1

      I think the draw of these tools is less sharpening needed. We know they are expensive and less necessary as you get into more obscure tools. But their target market wants to spend more time working wood and less honing their blades.