Tool Talk
Woodworking Forum => Woodworking Forum => Topic started by: johnsironsanctuary on October 05, 2019, 01:12:34 PM
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I was at The ReStore in West Bend a week or two ago and found this plane from the early sixties.
it was in a pretty good box and was very close to new. I bought it mostly for the patented blade feature that I had never seen before. Does anyone know any more about it?
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2nd batch of photos
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Hello, John. That is a fine looking plane!!! I like the corrugated sides, what does the sole look like? I went through a couple of old Sears catalogs, nothing in a Jack Plane with a 4 edge cutter. They offered a cast aluminum body plane with a 4 edge cutter, but it looked more like a Surform. First one I have seen, great score, with the box to boot!!! Regards, Lou
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No knowledge. It's pretty trick, and they thoughtfully numbered the sides so that, when you find side No. 4 is dull, you know it's time for a sharpening session.
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The box has the patent feature added as a sticker. I saw the same catalog with the sure form looking plane, but not this one. The sole shows no wear, but signs of white paint. Like you get from planing storm windows. There was a little bit of rust. I removed it and the paint on the sole. The ad came from the same catalog as the aluminum plane. I can’t find my Gary Lauver vendor list for Craftsman. If anyone has it, I would be curious as to who made it.
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And yet it didn't revolutionize the industry! The market is fickle.
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I have not tried it yet, but I suspect that it will chatter a bit more than a traditional blade.
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Maybe four times as much :grin:
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I was hoping that JimC would weigh in on this one. Perhaps he knows who made it.
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Hey John
That is a hip find
4-in-1 would be a temptation
Just curious how you came up with 60's for the plane
I have a rabbet and fillister plane roughly equivalent
to my Stanley No. 78 which came in a box like yours.
Your box looks to be in significantly better condition.
As for corrugation: Have a Craftsman Jointer 22" Length/
No. 7 size in Stanley world. Sides and sole are corrugated.
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Hey John
That is a hip find
4-in-1 would be a temptation
Just curious how you came up with 60's for the plane
I have a rabbet and fillister plane roughly equivalent
to my Stanley No. 78 which came in a box like yours.
Your box looks to be in significantly better condition.
As for corrugation: Have a Craftsman Jointer 22" Length/
No. 7 size in Stanley world. Sides and sole are corrugated.
I found the ad posted above in a 1963 catalog below the “Sureform” with the 4 way blade.
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Not sure what year that double rabbet (like the Stanley 78) is, but it was probably made by Sargent: the little "rhino horn" on the front is a giveaway, and helpful if you're using the plane without a fence (which is the right answer at times).
I'd speculate the 60/70s, but with no good grounding for the speculation.