iamnothim said:
[member=4358]derekcohen[/member]
What species did you use to make your shooting board.
I can sense that your post just enticed me into a 51' of my own.
I'll just have to use my no.5 jack plane for ...."jack planing"
My board is very pedestrian Except I put Delrin strips down for gliding
Yours is exceptional and should be in Fine Woodworking
Thanks. The board above was built from Jarrah, which is from Western Australia.
The choice of shooting board design comes down to flat vs ramped. There are pros and cons for each.
Please keep in mind that a shooting board does not have to be fancy to work. Cheap and cheerful is fine ..... however saying this on the FOG does not fly!
A ramped board is best when using a plane with a straight blade, such as a LA Jack. The 5 degree ramp introduces a enough angle to cause the plane to enter the wood progressively as opposed to flat on. This reduces the impact, which increases control when used. I started out using a HNT Gordon Trying Plane, which is a woodie. This benefitted from a ramped board.
A plane with a skewed blade, such as a #51, does not require a ramp as the skew does the work. The skew additionally slices the wood, which the straight blade in a ramped board does not do.
There are three different #51 type shooting planes. I happen to own them all!
The first is the Stanley #51/52 Chute plane and board, which is the King of them all. I was lucky enough to find one cheaply on eBay many years ago (as the frog of the plane was busted), fixed it up and restored it.
Several years later, LN brought out their #51 plane, and my wife purchased this for me for a birthday. it looks right at home here ..
I wrote a review here:
http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ToolReviews/LN51ShootingPlane.html
A couple of years went by. I have been fortunate to have been one of the testers of tools for Lee Valley/Veritas for the past decade. I get to test most of the planes, chisels, and some of the saws. Often this goes from early drawings of concepts through to pre-production versions. My involvement with their shooting plane was to use it and determine if it worked in all department before it went to production. This led to my acquiring the Veritas shooting plane ...
The review is here:
http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ToolReviews/LVShootingPlane.html
While I love the classic looks of the LN, the Veritas is a much better plane, and its BU configuration blows away the opposition with edge holding. It is the Veritas that lives on my shooting board.
Heh .. with regards Fine Woodworking magazine, I have had some of my tools featured there

This bridle plough plane in Sheoak was one ...
Build it here:
http://www.inthewoodshop.com/ShopMadeTools/BridlePloughBuild.html
Regards from Perth
Derek