Traditional Culture Encyclopedia - Traditional culture - How big is the carpenter's plane?

How big is the carpenter's plane?

It's basically useless to work now. Furniture factories are all planing around.

Most of the dry decoration is half-baked and occasionally misused. Users themselves are not sure about the type and specific use.

Except for special planers, such as all kinds of line planers (starting line and edge line are basically solved by milling cutter now, which is more efficient and fancy), cutting, external circle and internal circle, and even planing. These are special planers, which are generally rare.

Planes for leveling (that is, planes that look like people's minds) can generally be divided into three types.

1, rough planing, land reclamation planing, second tiger first class. It is its name, the length is generally 280-300 mm, and its main function, as the name implies, is land reclamation and rough leveling. In the process of manual production, after sawing, or after punching a rough plane with an axe and shovel, it is used for rough scraping and leveling, and is generally used for deep feeding.

2, long plane, flat seam plane, the length is generally 480-560MM, the main function is to flatten the long material after rough leveling, and when two long materials are butt-jointed, they usually eat less.

3, net planing, smooth planing, the length is generally 180-200MM, this is after things are done, do a small range of flatness adjustment on the plane, net light, eat very little, and the process is before sanding.

The above three types can be simply distinguished from each other in terms of length, but apart from the intuitive length, there are still some differences in blade width and planer angle, which are known by experts, and it is unnecessary for laymen to know so much. I think I'm tired of watching these.