«TRY PLANE» এর সঙ্গে সম্পর্কিত ইংরেজী বই
নিম্নলিখিত গ্রন্থপঞ্জী নির্বাচনে
try plane শব্দটির ব্যবহার খুঁজুন। ইংরেজী সাহিত্যে
try plane শব্দের ব্যবহারের প্রসঙ্গ সম্পর্কিত বই এবং তার থেকে সংক্ষিপ্তসার।
The try plane is sometimes used on a shooting board (see Section 15) for planing
end grain. Try planes, like jack and smoothing planes, may be obtained either as
wood or metal planes. The blade of the try plane should always be set to make ...
2
The Woodworker's Bible: A Complete Guide to Woodworking
The jack plane, with a slight curve to its cutting edge, is used to get approximate
flatness. The jack plane is followed by a jointer, or a fore or tryplane. Its longer
sole reduces the high spots. Use the try plane along the wood for most of the
work, ...
3
Hand Tool Essentials: Refine Your Power Tool Projects with ...
Fore planes may have wide-open mouths. Tear-out is limited by working at some
angle across the grain. Try planes need a moderately tight mouth to work with the
grain when needed. If a try plane's mouth was as tight as a smoother's it would ...
Popular Woodworking Editors, 2007
4
The New Traditional Woodworker: From Tool Set to Skill Set ...
Now switch to a try plane. Set it for a medium-coarse shaving (about .005" thick)
and run it from one end to the other. Take overlapping strokes, sort of like mowing
a lawn. At first only the tops of the diagonal grooves will come off, then full ...
5
Encyclopedia of Furniture Making
PLANING (SURFACING) Either the fore- or jack-plane is used for the first rough
levelling, the try-plane for true levelling and the finely set smoothing-plane for
final surfacing. Contrary to the practice recommended by some writers, the cutting
...
Being an all-round, general- purpose plane it is ideal for both site and bench
work. Try plane - is the largest plane a craftsman uses. Its main use is for straight
planing and levelling. This type of plane varies from 450 mm to 600 mm in length.
Use a jack or try plane to plane the face edge straight and square to the face side
. 7. Check periodically with a try square. 8. Mark as face edge. 9. Gauge to
thickness using the stock of the gauge from the face side. 10. Plane down to the
gauge ...
8
The Structural Conservation of Panel Paintings: Proceedings ...
This is rather shorter than the modern joiner's try plane, but considerably longer
ones are evident from the later Middle Ages (Fig. 13). The preferred method of
producing an accurate edge joint with a long plane is to lay out all the pieces side
...
Kathleen Dardes, Andrea Rothe, 1998
15. A wooden jackplane; although these have gone out of fashion they are
superior to steel planes for taking off heavy shavings, are not so likely to break if
dropped and can be trued up when worn. 16. A steel fore plane or try plane 450,
560 ...
Wider molding planes, such as cornice planes, pump planes, and other specialty
planes, often have a bench mouth similar to a jack or try plane. Hollows and
rounds are the most basic molding planes, and in many ways they are still the
most ...