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Thread: Grooving plane blade wider than skate.

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Dec 2006
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    Warwick, RI
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    Grooving plane blade wider than skate.

    I recently bought a wooden grooving plane and it seems to work fine but the blade cut's 1/4" and the skate is quite a bit smaller. Possibly an 1/8". Is this normal or did I get the wrong blade with my plane?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Dec 2010
    Location
    South Coastal Massachusetts
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    Lots of my planes are like this.

    I'm not really sure what the skate does,
    other than extend the bed below the wood body.

    Perhaps the front of the skate is there to help it track?

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Jun 2010
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    twomiles from the "peak of Ohio
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    Mine is from the 1860s, skate is a skinny 1/8" thick. Might be so a user can plough with a narrower iron. Skinny skates will not bind in a groove wider than they are, also.

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
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    Williamsburg,Va.
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    I don't use those type planes,being mostly a musical instrument maker. But,I think the skate is there to limit the depth of the cut,and keep the iron from just trying to dive into the wood. It is narrower than the iron. Though I was also the toolmaker,I never was asked to make that type of plane.

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2004
    Location
    Perth, Australia
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    9,492
    Quote Originally Posted by Richard Hutchings View Post
    I recently bought a wooden grooving plane and it seems to work fine but the blade cut's 1/4" and the skate is quite a bit smaller. Possibly an 1/8". Is this normal or did I get the wrong blade with my plane?
    The irons on a wooden plough plane usually range from 1/8" through 5/8" in a full set of 8. If the skate was wider than 1/8", then the 1/8" blade could not plough a groove unless the iron was extended.



    The skate runs in the groove, and the leading edge of iron extends just beyond the skate.



    Regards from Perth

    Derek

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
    Location
    Williamsburg,Va.
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    as you can see from Derek's picture,the skate is a substitute for the bottom of the blade,so it controls the depth of cut that the blade can make on each pass. I do not mean the depth of the whole groove the plane is cutting,just the bite that the iron can take.

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