Hand Plane Tote Repair For A Missing Horn
I have quite a few vintage Stanley plane totes that look like this. Seems to be a very common form of damage, guess maybe the first thing to hit the ground when they fall. First thing I did was clean up and straighten out the damaged area with ...
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7 comments so far
a1Jim
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87110 posts in 1745 days
#1 posted 498 days ago
Welcome to Ljs a world wide community were there are great people,super projects and great woodworkers.Enjoy
-- W James Brokenbourgh Custom furniture maker http://artisticwoodstudio.com/
SnowyRiver
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45700 posts in 1648 days
#2 posted 498 days ago
Welcome aboard. Nice that you could join us on Lumberjocks.
-- Wayne - Plymouth MN
Woodenwizard
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#3 posted 498 days ago
Welcome to LJ. Great to see another Colorado woodworker.
-- John, Colorado's (Wooden Wizard)
Max
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#4 posted 498 days ago
Glad to see that you have made LumberJocks a part of your Woodworking experience… Welcome
-- Max "Desperado", Salt Lake City, UT
surfin2
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#5 posted 498 days ago
Welcome To LumberJocks.
Good Luck…
-- Rick
woodworm
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#6 posted 497 days ago
Welcome to Lumberjocks!
-- masrol, kuala lumpur, MY.
Lazy_K
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10 posts in 358 days
#7 posted 325 days ago
Hi I saw your comment on the “hand plane of your dreams” forum about a #62 low angle plan. according to ‘antique & collectabel STANLEY TOOLS guide to identity & value” by John Walter ( 2nd edition 1996) it’s market value in 1996 was from $250 to $500. you may want to pick it up if it’s still there when next you are in the area.
K
-- Kai SaerPren
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