I bought a lot of old tools a while back and now have two Stanley 12 which were part of that lot. I wasn't a very interested with that tools but, after sharpening properly the blade, the results are great. If I need to scrape this is now my favorite tool.
In my arsenal I have a few card scrapers, a Stanley 80 and a Lie-Nielsen large scraping plane. The LN scraper has given me all kind of problems. It must be my fault but it's definitely a difficult tool to master.
The blade is in bad shape. Here is how I sharpen it.
Initial condition.
I want to get nice clean steel near the edge on the back because I will be sharpening this blade with a 40-45° bevel. I use D. Charlesworth "ruler trick" to achieve this.
The next step is to shape a primary bevel at 40-45°. I use a diamond stone for this.
This blade finally required a rough diamond stone because it's fairly thick and the end was square.
The burr is removed using an Arkansas stone but with a thick ruler. I want to be sure that I'm on the very edge.
Now it's a standard sharpening like any other blade. I begin with a coarse stone.
Followed by a fine India stone.
Leather with green compound (25 times each sides).
For the back I keep the blade at a small angle to emulate what I've done with the thick ruler.
The last step is to use a burnisher to form a hook. I begin with an angle of 45° approx.
With each stoke the burnisher angle is reduced gradually to 15°.
The pressure on the burnisher is not very much, maybe 5 or 10 lbs.
The blade in a Stanley 12 has an approximate angle of 5° forward. Adding the 15° hook you get a total angle of attack of 20° with a tiny hook. This is equivalent to have a plane with a 20° blade and a chipbreaker at a few thousand from the edge.
Let's test that tool and see if the blade is sharpened properly. I use cherry.
If I want to have a heavier shaving I need to tilt the blade forward.
All the shavings are in the middle of the plane, that means that the sole is somewhat rounded. It also means that it's a newer model (originally Stanley made flat soles). It is, again, well documented on the excellent website of Supertool.
Now that this tool is all set to work, I use it to clean my workbench top. It was very dirty because I've restored many tools recently.
This tool is really working nicely. I've put aside my Lie-Nielsen scraper plane and now use this inexpensive Stanley 12.
For sharpening a scaper like this I follow the instructions from Veritas.
Normand
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