Popular Woodworking 2005-08 № 149, страница 14

Popular Woodworking 2005-08 № 149, страница 14

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Letters

continued from page 10

to accommodate the slowest drying species.

I have pushed tens of thousands of feet of 4/4 hardwood lumber through a planer at our business, so my advice is based on experience. When planing to 13/l6", 99 percent of the surface of 4/4 lumber will clean up. We rarely plane to 3/4", but my guess the figure at 3/4" would be 99.9 percent. Turning another V4" of your lumber into shavings by starting at 5/4 seems a high price to pay to squeeze out a little more yield of planed surface.

Bill Tindall Church Hill, Tennessee

What About the English Rounder Planes for Chairmaking?

I have a couple of questions regarding the article on chair building ("Cheating at Chairmaking" April 2005). You highly recommend the rounder planes made by Ray Iles. I was wondering if you had tried similar planes made by Fred Lambert (ashemcrafts. com) from England. It seems every British book on chairmaking uses them.

Secondly, do you recommend the Veritas concave spokeshave for spindle shaping? In the article I see you're using one, but you make no mention of it. Is it worth $75?

Terry Kelly Presque Isle, Maine

I used the Ashem Crafts rotary and trapping planes during a class taught by Don Weber. Weber is quite fond of them, but I wasn't as enchanted with them as I was with the Ray Iles tools. To each his own, I suppose. As to the Veritas concave spokeshave, I highly recommend it — not mentioning it by name was an oversight. It's an indispensable part of my toolkit. PW — Christopher Schwarz, executive editor

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