OK. Shooting Boards.
Sorry to have been a while in responding. Needed to delve a bit in the workshop to locate the shooting board I made up for a block plane to use on small parts (usually box interiors or bits of restorations)
i'm no videographer, so apologies for inflicting this on you, but it gives an indication of size and construction. Starting with a drawing, and on to my benchtop
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and here's a link to(if it works) to one I use frequently, with a 60 ½ block plane that has been tuned up and is very sharp, sorry about the poor photography. If you make a block of timber with one face of abrasive, you can use it instead of a plane to do the very finest of trimming to small parts, with a bit of care over holding down and rotating a curved part with your left hand you can also handle convex curves, and end up with something that has crisp edges and corners, and is accurate.
Block plane board for square ends
and an improved design, albeit that this one is to produce an accurate 45 degree angle. It illustrates the use of a '2 rail' runway for the plane. If you are unsure of yourself, I recommend doing this for the 'standard' board. For larger work, I generally use a No 7 bench plane (a couple of feet in length) on a larger version. The added weight of the moving cast iron ensures no stopping as the blade cuts through end grain. You can also use the same arrangement for long grain of course, though that is usually accomplished on the bench top.
Block Plane shooting board for 45 degree joints
Whilst ferreting about finding the shooting boards I also came across some abrasives, so I made an attempt at documenting some of them. Garnet, Aluminium Oxide, Silicon carbide, different makers, different grades, and some I'd forgotten I had, including correspondence with Norton about their Zirconium material, with a couyplke of sample sheets (Good stuff by the way)
anyway, here's a few minutes of abrasive blather.
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