That being said though there are some distinct advantages over Bailey planes. All 3 of these are solid user planes but the performance/cost of any of these 3 planes isn’t any better in my opinion than a well-tuned Bailey plane. Moving over to the non-Bailey patent planes the 3 contenders in my mind are Stanley Bedrock, Sargent Shaw’s Patent and Union X-plane. I haven’t yet tried Ohio or Millers Falls so can’t give you my opinion on that but someday soon I will give the MF a try. The cheeks on the early ones that I have looked at seem to be somewhat thin and in fact I have 2 No 5’s with cracks in the cheeks so make sure you look them over carefully before buying. The only issue with Union that I have found is that for whatever reason they are usually terribly abused, and it might be hard to find a nice one with no issues. A pre-Stanley version will tune relatively quickly, and the irons are pretty decent. Stay away from the post Stanley ones as the quality drops really fast after Stanley bought them. People generally pay you to take them away as they can’t even give these things away. Union is right there as well and right now in today’s market if I were looking for a plane that I can buy for the best price and achieve the best results it would have to be Union. I find that Sargent irons take a bit longer to sharpen than Stanley but hold an edge slightly better. If it doesn’t work as I like, then I will tune, and the needed time is less than an hour. With Sargent I normally just sharpen the iron and go. In my experience Stanley will generally take a couple of hours to check and get tuned. The least work and generally at a price point of 2/3 of the Stanley. Easiest I have found to tune would have to go to Sargent. As a new user, not a lot has to be done to get acceptable results and with just a bit more effort can work almost as good as the premium planes offered today. I would take Stanley Bailey just based on the number of them available. “I agree that most Bailey pattern planes can be tuned to provide mostly equivalent results. This was an answer to the Question, “When speaking of Bailey type hand planes as users, the difference between a high quality plane and a lower quality plane is the difference in time it takes to tune it. I thought it would be good to add some thoughts and post it where it can be found for future reference. The following quote was a post made by Casey Benton on a Facebook conversation.
0 Comments
Leave a Reply. |
AuthorWrite something about yourself. No need to be fancy, just an overview. ArchivesCategories |