Tool Talk
Woodworking Forum => Woodworking Forum => Topic started by: lptools on December 06, 2024, 08:53:49 PM
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I had both of these re-japanned by a friend . I cleaned up the milled faces and the steel and brass parts . The brass knobs are and handle screws on the No. 12 are correct replacements made by my b'in-law . The blade on the No. 12 is a new old stock Kunz. Everything else is original.
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Hey Lou, very nice restorations! Do you have a project in mind where you’re planning to use them? Looks like they’ll be around for another 100 years. As I recall, coolford used to do some nice work restoring old planes. It’s been some time since I’ve heard from him and I fear the worst.
Jim C.
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Hello, Jim C. Thanks , nothing in the works , so they are in the collection for now. Coolford always had great items!!
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Great looking planes & look better than new.
What did the B.I.L. use to do the reeding on the brass knobs? I hate to see them after someone used vise grips on them. Knurling tool works, but doesn't look right.
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Thanks for the reply! This is from my b'in-law ; I used a straight single pattern knurling die to cut the knurls . I then ground a piece of HSS with the appropriate radius to separate the knurls to match the original part.
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Thank you. I have several cross pattern knurling tools, but haven't seen a straight single pattern one. Now I know the proper name. Reeding is the edge of a coin term.
Just found a bunch of them on ebay from another country. They should be ok for brass. I just need to measure the pitch of some of the chewed up knobs.