How Does A Ripping Plane Rip Boards

2024-07-25に共有
The Kinnings Pattent Ripping plane:
Here is a video of making the fence for the ripping plane.    • Making A Fence For The Ripping Plane  

Join the Hive mind where I bounce Ideas around: discord.gg/BMGqbacm5H
Facebook Hivemind: www.facebook.com/groups/233277323895597

Patreon: www.patreon.com/woodbywright
Join this channel to get access to perks:
youtube.com/channel/UCbMtJOly6TpO5MQQnNwkCHg/join

How To Channel
Wood By Wright 2:    / @woodbywrighthowto  

--Tools I Suggest--
www.woodbywright.com/tool-suggestions

--Find Antique tools near you--
www.HandToolFinder.com/

THE MAN
"C"

Top Patreon Supporters:
DFM tool Works: dfmtoolworks.com/
Andrew Wilson
Rich Dodson
Sherlock
Brett Lance
Michael Kelewae
Daniel McGrath
Ian McElcheran
Christopher Brown
Kenny-Anjanette Horn
Russell Gough
Brian Suker
Brian Suker
JT Belknap: dfmtoolworks.com/

////Help this channel grow\\\\
www.woodbywright.com/support/

////You Can find me:\\\\
www.woodbywright.com/contact-me/
TikTok: www.tiktok.com/@woodbywright
Instagram: www.instagram.com/woodbywright/
Facebook: www.facebook.com/WoodByWright/

Intro music: Tim Sway timsway.net/

background music: Udo Stehle www.upwork.com/freelancers/~0...
Instagram: @udostehle

コメント (21)
  • When you first showed us this, I thought it would be used to make a kerf for sawing - like a kerfing plane but only for ripping. Interesting tool. Thanks for sharing.
  • @AZbone
    I doubt I’ll ever use these older tools in woodworking but I find your content to be awesome! I’m glad you have this passion because I’ve learned so much since I started following. Thank you so much for learning me.
  • So basically, instead of cutting along the grain like a normal knife, it actually cuts into it from the top. Honestly that's actually smart. And probably not too difficult to build one yourself
  • @franky47
    This looks handy for making Kumiko!
  • @toshn4151
    The japanese have a tool called a wari-kebiki, roughly translates to "breaking marking gauge". It's a marking gauge with a beefier blade than a regular kebiki, and usually with a rabbet. you score it with a bunch of swipes and then tap it with a hammer to get shooting-board ready cuts. Note that it's meant only for soft woods like hinoki and paulowina, and would probably not work on anything with janka 600+.
  • @uwyphi
    been doing a 1/12 doll house this year and i wouldn't have mind using this tool for ripping the parts
  • I noticed Rex’s Sawyer’s Hooks on your benchtop. Nice. I feel part of a real community. Kudos.
  • I've never realized that the 45/55 had a slitting cutter that would be used separately from another iron.
  • Hmmm. Maybe do a box or drawers with as many 1 trick tools as you can. An old grooving plane, that ripping plane, maybe a molding plane, I dunno… a mortise drill. Oooh. And then we can track the prices those go for on eBay before and after the video 😂
  • Would guess ripping strips for Kumiko with that one ist a lot of fun.
  • Watched your short and glad to see a longer format discussing and demonstrating this! Very cool tool! Thanks for sharing James! Now, get Rex to have Compass Rose offer a it as a kit! 😁
  • A very interesting tool. Like you I had not seen this before. I wonder why this did not become more common.
  • I've not used the ripping plane, but I have used the slitting cutter on the 45. I used it for making a deeper mark on wood before resawing it, and I have used it to make blanks for my Bridge City Tool Works Chopstick Maker. For drawer bottoms I either make a rabbet or just shave the bottom down with a regular bench plane.
  • Never seen or heard of them - BUT...they should be back in production. From a carpentry point of view, it could be used to quickly mark large timber (like a marking gauge but easier) before ripping with a saw and I imagine it would work on end grain of thick timber too. Nice find...! Dad joke on the horizon... Talking of dotted lines, when I got my full driving licence, it had a bit that said 'tear along the dotted line', so I did - and I lost my licence for speeding...! 😐
  • @rolandkuhn9066
    Always enjoy when you show the archaic and unusual. Never seen on and don't know how useful even for a guy who specializes in hand hooks. I would definitely like to play with one but if it didn't fall into my lap, I probably would have passed. Nice find.
  • I would love to see thin wood trays: would you do thin wood mitered dovetail for the tray? That would be a fascinating (and difficult) project.
  • I don’t have a Kinnings patent ripping plane, but I do have a 3-arm kerfing plane, and that’s how I rip my drawer bottoms. The Kinnings is nice because when the bottom is slid into a groove, the slight imperfections are hidden.
  • Really interesting tool indeed, James! 😮 Now you can finally make all those drawers organization... thingies... You know what. Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊