I'm planning ahead here for the drawer bottom groove I'm going to need to cut. I don't have a plow/plough plane. Do I need one or is there a good way to cut a groove with other tools?
Thanks
I'm planning ahead here for the drawer bottom groove I'm going to need to cut. I don't have a plow/plough plane. Do I need one or is there a good way to cut a groove with other tools?
Thanks
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
table saw with dado stack or couple passes
router - electric or plane
chisel
Hi, do you have a router plane?
A sharp knife and a router plane could be used.
Of course so could a shaper, a slotting cutter and a power feeder.
Regards, Rod.
Please keep in mind the forum we are in...
[SIGPIC][/SIGPIC]
Matt, my second point was meant to be humourous, my first point is how I made them before purchasing a plough plane.......Rod.
I have cut slots using a knife and a chisel.
For a drawer groove, you could make a holder for a chisel that would be like a scratch stock, but using a chisel for the blade.
It would be easy if you have a rabbet plane to make a tongue on a piece of wood to hold the chisel. This would set your depth. then all you need is a fence. This would likely not even need a knife. Just make sure the tongue is a hair narrower than the chisel is wide.
If you do not have a rabbet plane, then you could saw the tongue.
jim
"A pessimist sees the difficulty in every opportunity; an optimist sees the opportunity in every difficulty."
- Sir Winston Churchill (1874-1965)
You could use a wooden groove plane. They go cheap (well under $20) if they are separated from the matching tongue plane.
If you plan to do any number of drawers in your future I would invest in a dedicated drawer-bottom plane. A plow would work but a dedicated plane is already setup and every time you grab it you get the same result. I own one from Rob Cosman and it is one of my most enjoyable planes. I could create drawer-bottom grooves all day long
With skill and tool we put our trust and when that won't do then power we must.
You can also get a very consistent fixed groove for drawer bottoms by using a Stanley #48 or the LN Tongue and Groove plane. For a zero cost method I would suggest using a scrap of hardwood to make a chisel holder (plane) for use with a chisel that matches the groove width. A plane is just a chisel holder right? You can design the depth stop and fence right into the tool. You can also clamp or tack a stiff batten to the drawer side to act as a fence.
Or maybe this is just your opportunity to justify buying a plow plane. They are really fun to use.
Last edited by Jeff Burks; 05-28-2010 at 6:46 PM.
I seem to remember Derek Cohen having a tutorial on making dados (just grooves) with a handsaw and chisel. Maybe a router plane was also employed.
ploughs can be had for reasonable prices on ebay
search Record 043 or 044 or Record (plough,plow)
http://cgi.ebay.com/PLOUGH-PLANE-REC...item1e5c162c0d