Originally posted by olddawg
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Personally, I'd use a jointer.
Woodworking Jointers
if I had to do this in my woodshop I wouldn't use a power planer. I'd use a jointer. it's like a planer, but its a freestanding table designed for squaring large pieces of wood on end, to provide clean edges for preparing joints. it has a horizontal rotary blade, like a planer, but on a fixed table. you lower the rotary blade along with either the input or the output plane of the table to adjust the cut depth. most of the time a jointer used to square off the edges of boards for edge joining, though it's what I'd use to shave the back of a neck tenon. it allows very small amounts of wood to be removed with precision.
i guess the other option you had thought of would be to try to pass a handheld power planer across a clamped neck, or to clamp the planer upside down and try to pass the neck across it. i don't like the instability of trying to move a torquing power tool over a stationary object. i prefer to move a small object like a guitar neck across a stationary tool, and use a power planer on a larger object like a door that needs a little bit shaved off of an edge.
another method might be to route out the mortise in the body, if there's enough wood for that.
depending on how much you need to remove: if you only needed to remove a small amount of wood and you didn't have access to precision tools, perhaps you could do it with a belt sander or a rotary sander. again, a table mounted sander is better than one that's hand held.
if you needed to remove more wood than a sander could handle, then find someone who is skilled with a tablesaw or a bandsaw. people who are skilled with those tools would have no problem building a jig to hold your guitar neck to a fence, and to pass the heel end of the neck across the blade to shave off material, leaving only finish standing for the final step. with a precision fence/jig it would be no problem to take of 3/16" to 1/4".
Me? I used to use a table saw to do these sorts of things before I had the jointer. But I understand that precision table saw work is not for everyone, and a jointer is a tool that not many people would have access to.
John, do you think there's a better way?
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