On 2018-01-22 7:51 AM, William Ghio wrote:
> I don’t know if it has any other name and am too lazy to go thru the old books
to look for it. It’s just a flat piece of wood w/ a vee cut in it. stock is
wedged in the vee w/ a shaped block and stuff is locked. Very handy for edge
planing. Anybody else use one of these?
Yup! I call it a planing wedge. Mine is 1/2in plywood, the better to
avoid splitting. I put the wedge on the far side of the workpiece to
bring the work closer to the bench edge. I hold it in place between the
metal dog on my vise and a dog-hole post on the bench. Have to make
another one soon as it's worn and doesn't hold as well as it once did.
I'll make the new one out of 3/4 ply. An alternative type uses two
strips lodged in dog-holes, one strip parallel to the bench, the other
angled. I've also seen them with a small hook fashioned on the leading
edge of the wedge, which the material catches to push the wedge in. I
guess it doesn't need a mallet to tighten.
Don
--
"You can tell a man that boozes by the company he chooses"
The Famous Pig Song, Clarke Van Ness
The harder they come, the bigger they fall." Ry Cooder
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