O 1 steel tolerates more acute sharpening vs.
Machine planer blade angle for hardwood.
While there is more to consider in edge geometry than just the angle of cut i e durability you could reasonably sharpen the bevel on the iron of a low angle block plane iron to 33 degrees.
Given its 12º bed angle you would end up with an angle of cut of 45 degrees 12º 33º 45º the same as on a standard angle plane.
Position jig over blade and cutterhead with the machine unplugged place the jig on the cutterhead and against the chip deflector.
I bought some freud replacement blades some time a go and they are sharpened at 45.
The blades are set parallel to the table within 001 from end to end.
The hook angle is the angle built into the cutterhead that creates the cutting action.
With hardwoods a scraping action is needed.
With softwoods a slicing action is needed and a hook of 20 to 30 degrees in the head would be needed.
However the plane s angle of attack surely matters too.
The lower you set the angle the sharper your planer blade will be.
My dc 380 planer and dj 20 jointer were both delivered with hss blades sharpened at a 30 angle.
My planer blades are adjusted in the machine by using a jig sitting on the table surface with a indicator with the point facing up at the edges of the knives.
Set the direction of cut in the jointer and reduce angle from the tip of the blade.
If you go with a standard planer head then use a hook angle of 10 to 12 degrees.
So my q is this to what angle do you have your planer blades ground and why.
Rotate the cutterhead to locate the bevel side of the knife forward of center under the stone.
As the steel of the jointer or planer blades is too hard it becomes quite tough and time consuming.
Mark the location of the knife on the planner body to align the other blades.
Both machines cut bevel down so the leading angle of the cut has not changed and there seem to be plenty of clearance in the cutting circle with the 45 blades.
Blades honed to more acute angles cut better but stay sharp less long.
Setting the honing guide to 30 degrees requires you to have 38 mm of the planer blade sticking out of the guide.
If the angle is too sharp such as 30 degrees it digs deeper and breaks the shavings into pieces.
A 2 or pm blades but the latter two stay sharp longer at a somewhat less acute hone angle.
A 30 degree angle is ideal for getting a sharp yet durable planer blade.
If the blade angle is set properly the planer will produce long curly shavings of wood.
I don t mind any out of balance condition that might exist.
Ensure the straightness of.
The low hook angle provides that.
So a bit of googling as to what they should be and i discover that planer knives can vary from 30 to 45 degrees.
Sharpening jointer knives by hand is a bit easy when it is done by some machine or a planer jointer knives grinding jig.