gahrajmahal
Well-known member
Our old house shifts, especially when we have those late summer droughts, which we had a doozy this year. Our front door was sticking big time so I used my vixen file (auto body tool) and some sandpaper on a block to relieve the top corner of the door so it would open easily. At the time I was wondering if I should be using a Wood Plane to do the job, like Norm Abrahm would conveniently whip out of his pocket. A few shavings would have been much neater than sandpaper!
Today I went to our local “Habitat for Humanity” store to drop off some of my son’s castoffs from his room addition project. The last time there they were real picky about the items, so I planned to be pissed off and leave without shopping in the store! Well, they were very nice and took almost my whole truckload

Walking around I found that they wanted their stuff more than I did (pipe dream pricing) but I came a small collection of wood planes priced to sell, $1.10
I’m hoping to get my first “you ****” for this savvy purchase.
So, what can you tell me about this little Stanley plane I purchased? Is this the type of thing one could remove a few thousandths off a door top so it doesn’t stick anymore? I’m showing a photo of our basement bathroom door that trapped grandson #1 inside this weekend (you have to push down on the door knob to unstick the door. It seems reasonably sharp but the slot the blade sticks through doesn’t allow much space for the wood shaving to slide through. There is no adjustment for the blade angle either. I’m trying to shave from the end grain portion of the door.
Let me know if this is the right tool for the job,
Thanks!






Today I went to our local “Habitat for Humanity” store to drop off some of my son’s castoffs from his room addition project. The last time there they were real picky about the items, so I planned to be pissed off and leave without shopping in the store! Well, they were very nice and took almost my whole truckload
Walking around I found that they wanted their stuff more than I did (pipe dream pricing) but I came a small collection of wood planes priced to sell, $1.10
I’m hoping to get my first “you ****” for this savvy purchase.
So, what can you tell me about this little Stanley plane I purchased? Is this the type of thing one could remove a few thousandths off a door top so it doesn’t stick anymore? I’m showing a photo of our basement bathroom door that trapped grandson #1 inside this weekend (you have to push down on the door knob to unstick the door. It seems reasonably sharp but the slot the blade sticks through doesn’t allow much space for the wood shaving to slide through. There is no adjustment for the blade angle either. I’m trying to shave from the end grain portion of the door.
Let me know if this is the right tool for the job,
Thanks!






