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The Spear & Jackson CSP3 No. 3 Carpenters Smoothing Plane is a robust, hand-powered woodworking tool featuring a durable cast iron body, precision milled base and faces for flatness, and a sharp 45mm high carbon steel blade. Designed for cabinet making and general joinery, it includes a brass adjusting screw for fine blade control. This tool offers professional-grade performance at an accessible price, ideal for millennial managers who value craftsmanship and quality in their DIY projects.




| ASIN | B07KD1G6K7 |
| Base Material | Cast Iron |
| Best Sellers Rank | #85,956 in Tools & Home Improvement ( See Top 100 in Tools & Home Improvement ) #12 in Smoothing Planes |
| Brand Name | Spear & Jackson |
| Color | Black |
| Customer Reviews | 4.2 4.2 out of 5 stars (424) |
| Cutting Depth | 45 Millimeters |
| Cutting width | 1.75 Inches |
| Global Trade Identification Number | 05012095616511, 05012095616580 |
| Included Components | 1 x Spear & Jackson CSP3 No. 3 Smoothing Plane |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 8.66"L x 2.17"W x 5.31"H |
| Item Type Name | Carpenters Smoothing Plane |
| Item Weight | 1.56 Kilograms |
| Manufacturer | Spear & Jackson |
| Material Type | Wood |
| Model Number | CSP3 |
| Power Source | Hand Powered |
| Style Name | No. 3 |
| Unit Count | 1.0 Count |
C**R
Excellent tool, considering the price, but set-up needed to perform like a proper smoothing plane.
This is an excellent tool considering the price. (I paid a bit less than $25.) The casting is good, handles are nice, and the blade, chip breaker and cap seem to be pretty well made. Straight out of the box, it was ready to take nice shavings from a piece of red cedar I had laying around. However, the plane needed quite a bit of work to get it to perform like a proper smoothing plane. I disassembled the plane and examined the components. The casting appeared to be well made with no gross defects. The sole of the plane was more-or-less flat, but it did require about 45 minutes to flatten properly. (Working from 80 grit sandpaper to 220.) The sides were perpendicular to the sole. The casting was nicely painted, although there was a bit of paint on the seating for the frog, which I scraped off with a razor blade. As is usual for new planes, the back of the blade needed to be flattened before sharpening. That took about 15 minutes, and sharpening the blade took about 5 more. I put the plane together, adjusted the frog, and made test cuts. Some debris was accumulating between the blade and the chip breaker, indicating a poor fit between the two. I flattened the end of the chip breaker on a stone so that it fit the blade correctly. That took about 10 minutes. Total time required to properly set this up as a smoothing plane was about 1 hr 15 minutes. After setting up the plane, it did indeed perform like a proper smoothing plane. On figured maple, the plane removed very fine shavings and left a glass-like surface. At this point, I am very happy with the plane and consider it to be a bargain despite the work needed for tune up. Thus my 5 star rating. My only real only real complaint is the excessive backlash on the wheel that adjusts the blade depth, but I expect that with an inexpensive plane and can live with it.
A**R
Good plane
Good plane. After some honing of blade works well. Rare size, not many manufacturers produce No 3. For this price it is steal.
T**N
Good but with a key error
Overall, this might be good to learn to fettle a plane or if you already know how. A true beginner might be very frustrated with this tool. For the price, it is a good value as long as you know what you are getting into. I have to commend S&J for making a number 3 at this price, and compared to any other source of number 3 planes, this is a tremendous deal. After many months, still there it is at a great price, it is a great thing that S&J even offer it. But there were some quality control issues that could trip up a beginner. The casting was dead flat on the sole and perfectly square on both sides. This was excellent. It is a thick casting that feels very solid. The chip breaker is on the cheap side, just a slab of metal, but not too bad and doesn't need to be fancy to work. The blade and chipbreaker were ground well enough and didn't require much to make perfectly flat. The chipbreaker did have a rounded edge I didn't like, so I spent 30 min turning that into a bevel-type edge and ensuring it was flat against the blade. After using, I think the iron quality is basically fine, no obvious issues there. The wheel mechanism is OK, better than some other cheapo models. It is smooth, but it does have some slop. The pressed metal piece that links with the blade itself to advance it was too loose against its mounting pin. So I hammered a nail to remove that cross pin from the frog, and then hammered the eyelet openings the pin runs through to smush them a bit and make the fit tighter. No more slop there. The frog is the big problem. Mine had a casting that wasn't properly milled, as the factory left a wad of iron next to the screw hole that interfered with the screw height. It raised the screw head against the blade until it made the blade ride above the frog bed! (My photo shows the location...like a blob of iron that was not milled out.) I used a drill and a thin HSS chisel to gouge that blob of iron out so that the blade would seat properly. A normal person would send it back rather than do this. There were also some small chips on the edges of the frog bed casting, but nothing that affects performance. The mouth had some extra iron near a corner that needed very careful filing out for the blade to seat properly on the mouth. The mouth is pretty open for a smoother, so I bought a thicker iron that's in the mail now. I used a hand file to go over the frog bed and other parts that needed to be flat. Overall except for the big stupid errors, the castings of the frog and body are quite good, if that makes sense...and especially compared to other planes in its class. It's as if nobody checked this one, quite strange. The handle will need some TLC to get it more comfortable. It's a nice wood and not sloppy at all but truly needs reshaping with files because some edges bit into the palm too much. After spending an afternoon getting everything as tuned as I could, I got decent 2-2.5 thou shavings and pretty good performance. I still think there's more fine tuning possible based on the results I'm getting so far. It doesn't feel as smooth as an old stanley 4, but I hope I can improve that. Overall, I'm happy to have a no 3 size for the price, and I'm treating it like a thrift store find, so I'm happy to put in work as its own project. In truth, nobody needs a number 3, so most people will regard this as a side project. For that, it is rewarding. I do wish the S&J markings were more than a light little etch on the side. But that's just me. A stamp on the iron would be a nice touch, for instance. A proper chipbreaker would also be fitting. Edit: Months later it is working flawless, the blade has held up well, I get full width shavings and it is really nice to use. The number 3 size is thinner and lighter than most similar smoothers, so I like to have it nearby. Also I see I am listed as Vine Voice. I just joined this week and bought this plane months ago with my own money. Just FYI.
G**V
Overall good quality, requires some fine tuning like all modern cheap hand planes do.
For the price its fantastic I paid $21.76 including tax and shipping! I have been experimenting with these modern hand planes from India under various names Grizzly, Draper and Spear & Jackson. I think there is a larger degree of variability with many of these planes from India, some are better machined and made and require a little less work. This plane by S & J was one such plane? It required the least amount of work out the 3 recent planes I have gotten. They all require flattening the sole and this was no exception just that it was closer to flat to start with. The blade and chipbreaker weren't bad either and was able to flatten and sharpen them in short order. I did not check the side squareness to sole since I had not planned on using it on a shooting board. The handles were nicely finished a bit more like the handles from Grizzly they were nicely shaped and finished with only like light oil or wax finish which is the way I prefer them, you can actually feel the wood this way. I had to fuss with the plane a little to get the blade and mouth adjusted properly but then it would take nice shavings, I may convert the plane into a scrub plane with a convex sharpening of blade? Overall very worthwhile plane! and I might look and see about ordering other sizes of S&J?
J**O
Bardzo dobry stosunek ceny do jakości. Polecam
G**E
RAS
T**M
It’s a great product, only issues Im having is the blade needed sharpening and the handle is very loose and there’s no more room to tighten the screw, other than that its a great beginner plane for the price.
E**O
Muy bueno como lo esperaba
D**Y
I already have a T5 a no41/2 and a number 4 as well as a selection of block planes but I rather fancied a no3 just to make the set, and as Rex Krugar said ' I have enough wood planes said no woodworker ever'. So I saw this one while browsing through the tools and thought £13.99 it's got to be worth a try, although at the cost I was not really that hopeful. But I have never brought a brand new plane before so the was a certain amount of expectation attached to it. The plane arrived in a small box well greased and in a bag. I cleaned off the grease with wd40 and had my first pass I was using a 2' 2"×2" length of pine par as my test piece, unsurprisingly it totally failed to give me a shaving but I had been expecting that result, so I was not disappointed 😅. My first step was to remove the cap and blade. The cap has a screw not a leaver but serves the same purpose and is at least on this size plane a good idea, it did need a bit of a swipe on the coarse and medium stones as the was some bubbling in the chrome plating but it was literally 1 minutes work to sort out. The blade required a full resharpaning useing a coarse diamond stone(160g) a medium stone (300g) and a fine whetstone (2500g) with a quick strop on a leather pad. The steel is nice and hard I have high hopes for it's ability to keep it's edge. If you don't have stones it easy enough to use wet'n'dry or even ordinary sandpaper just work your way through the grits, the whole sorting out the blade took about 25 minutes but that did include drinking a cup of coffee at the same time. The chip breaker was perfect so apart from degreasing no attention required. The sole was fairly well ground but when I gave it a scribble on with magic marker and a swipe or two across some sandpaper it became obvious that some love was going to be needed a slight hollow behind the mouth and at the heel also the right hand side was slightly out. But useing a medium grit sandpaper glued to a piece of plywood and some elbow grease it took me 10 minutes to get it square and level with a good polished finish. The tote(handle) was perfectly acceptable for me having polished the base I decided that I was happy with it's shape and feel the same thing with the front knob. I reassembled the plane and gave it another pass on my length of 2"×2" £13.99 and just over half an hour and I have a what appears to be rather decent bit of kit,it's definitely early days but I suspect that it's going to last me out. And it took less time to set up than my no5 about two hours less, How they can present this product for the ridiculous price I really can't understand but if you are in the market for a no3 get one give it a little bit of a fettle and start using it.
Trustpilot
3 weeks ago
3 weeks ago