One Great Tip » Hand Abrasive Planer

Hand Abrasive Planer

By David Munkittrick
Photo by David Munkittrick
Posted: August 17, 2009

Hand Abrasive PlanerI reach for my hand abrasive planer whenever I need to flush up hardwood edging to a veneered surface, sand a table top, or flatten figured wood.  It never leaves tear-out like my iron planes and it never creates dips and divots like my power sanders can. I also use it to joint the edges of veneer to create an invisible seam.

 

It's easy to make. Start with a block of well-seasoned maple or other hardwood. Make sure the block is flat and the edges are square.  To make the handle, I traced the finger grip from my hand saw and then used my plane handle as a guide to shape the handle back where it connects to the maple block and the knob grip in front. Sized my sander for 4x24 belts. I just rip a belt in half at the seam and use a couple of pine blocks to fasten the belt to either end of the block.



Article Rating:

0 (0 Votes)

Related Articles

More From Dave Munkittrick

Post a Comment

If you are already a member, Log in to comment more easily.

Your Name:
Email: (will not be shown)
Comment: (HTML tags will be removed)
Are You Human?

Select the name of each object you see below:

  • 1
  • 2
  • 3
  • 1
  • 2
  • 3

This little quiz helps us reduce the amount of SPAM robots that fill our databases with junk.

Fox Chapel - PlansWoodstore- Wood Plans