I just got my first scrub plane, an E.C.E.
It's amazing to use it, effortlessly slicing off thick curls!
It's making surfacing roughsawn lumber sooo much easier.
I just got my first scrub plane, an E.C.E.
It's amazing to use it, effortlessly slicing off thick curls!
It's making surfacing roughsawn lumber sooo much easier.
Hogging down roughsawn lumber is hard on a plane's sole. How does the ECE's sole holdup?
Likewise, roughsawn lumber often has embedded dust and grit that is hard on a scrub plane's blade. Does it chip?
Thanks.
Stan
Stan,
Over time the sole gets pretty groddy but that seems to have little effect on its useably. The iron also holds its edge well with little chipping but then it needn't be too sharp to do the job, I've several other scrubs but almost always reach for the ECE because it is light and the front horn is comfortable.
Awhile back someone posted a photo of his ECE scrub that had been in service many years, it was even uglier than mine but was still functioning.
ken
It sounds like the light weight and shape of the plane are the most attractive features. Correct?
I have never used a a horned plane before, but it appears that they would be easier to use hard for a long time, compared to a Bailey style metal-bodies plane, Japanese plane, or a Krenov style plane. Has that been your experience?
Stan
A dedicated scrub is a great thing (any decent make). I have the LV, and it makes short work of ugly twists and cups in lumber. Not as light as some, but the momentum and a properly lubed/waxed sole let it take nice thick curls with ease. Also, even on a scrub, sharp makes a huge difference. If you get lazy and forget for a while, you won't realize how much more effort you are putting out until you sharpen it up.
IMO the wedged ECEs are a terrific bargain. I have the jointer with a "Lignum Vitae" (actually Verawood) sole and it has proven to be an outstanding plane in use. As you say they don't get as much forum love as they deserve. I don't have the scrub because I already have the LV, but it would be near the top of my list if I were looking.
As I've said a few times I'm not such a fan of their pricier "Optimus" planes. I think that they add cost and complexity far in excess of their incremental benefit, but others will weight such tradeoffs differently.
Last edited by Patrick Chase; 10-11-2017 at 12:52 AM.
I have two scrub planes.....that H-F #33 was remade into a #3 sized scub, with a 3" radius grind on the iron.....then there is the Scrub Jack.....8" radius, #5 plane. Cheap ($6!) fairly light for a jack, and has a huge mouth. Then again....
flat poplar.jpg
About any old, cambered Jack can do this sort of work....
Or even a junior jack. Sometimes my #6 gets used like a scrub plane.About any old, cambered Jack can do this sort of work....
jtk
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
Took my tool tote and a couple of cedar boards out to the broken fence. Replaced some boards then the last board - old fence - crooked. The board needed to taper more than inch in 6 feet. Snapped a line which seemed to confuse the young fellows fixing their fence next door. They stared as I clamped the board in my workmate and trimmed to the line with my old Stanley scrub plane. Job done - young guys came and asked to borrow an extension cord. Scrub plane - the right tool for the job!