Tuesday, 28 March 2017
Norris Plane in Action
A short while ago a friend of mine was asking my advice about buying a Norris plane. The classic pre war model A5 was what he was looking for, but I persuaded him to go for the Norris A50 instead. It cost him a lot less and worked a dream. He is very pleased.
Here is the Norris A50 that I use. It required the minimum of sole flattening as there was a dip behind the mouth, see the darker area on the sole. I could have continued lapping to remove this but it wouldn't have made any difference to performance.
The mouth (the tiny dark area) is just a sliver, enough to let a reasonable shaving through.
Although this was a budget model by Norris, costing about half of the A5 in the 1920's, it is actually more stable as the iron rests on the metal casting rather than the rosewood infill. With the iron removed (below) you can see the casting with the wooden infill set back slightly so it plays no part in supporting the blade.
The other thing I like is the handle is set very low down, giving a better 'feel' in use.
Of course with a sharpened blade it works a treat....
.... even on this curly English walnut.
Hey david, great post
ReplyDeleteI really appreciate of hard work of creating norris plane.
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This is a good post, very informative for me. Found it really helpful for myself. Thanks for posting this. Good share, God Bless !
ReplyDeleteHey ... Thanks for giving the details of the product. Looks like its blade works so good just like the wooden sheets cut in the image below. Cutting of the sheet depends on the blade totally.
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