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Japanese Wood Block Plane KANNA 40mm Carenter's Tool Double Edge Senkichi

  • Based on 1,348 reviews
Condition: New
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Availability: In Stock.
Fulfilled by Amazon

Arrives Saturday, Jan 18
Order within 11 hours and 21 minutes
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Size: Standard


Features

  • Total length: 150mm
  • Blade width: 40mm
  • Size: W54 x H150 x D38mm
  • Weight: 140g
  • great for grinding wood surface

Description

[Application] Scraping work of wood surface. [Features, Functions] It is easy to use small size planes. [Material] Blade: Carbon tool steel. [Precautions] Since it is a cutlery, please handle with care. Do not use if there is a crack in Plane body, cutting edge. If there is a foreign object such as a nail in the material, please use it after removing it. Senkichi is one of eight original brands of Fujiwara Sangyo Co., Ltd., specialized in cutting tool for carpentry and gardening. "Providing products to all tool distribution channels in Japan." Established in April 17, 1944, the company business is carried out from the headquarters and seven branches and sales offices. [Products] Carpenterfs tools/Work tools/Air tools/Tip tools/ Work support/Gardening tools/Gardening equipment/Gardening supplies. [Product Categories] A wide range of products, from carpentry and power tools, to hand and gardening tools. As a trading firm focused on planning and development, we offer a variety of DIY tools, primarily power tools, hand tools, and gardening tools. Our product line includes approximately 100,000 models. This vast array of products allows us to satisfy the needs of our clients. [Carpenterfs tools] Basic DIY tools for cutting, grinding, hammering, polishing, and measuring. [Work tools] Hand tools for any work situation and application. [Air tools] Power tools that efficiently perform high-precision work. [Tip tools] Tool bits with high precision that can be safely used with any material [Work support] Product support for safe, secure, and comfortable work performance. [Gardening] Gardening equipment for hobby gardeners and professionals. [Gardening equipment] Wide range of products for pruning, cutting, planting, weeding, cultivating, and storing. [Gardening supplies] Gardening tools for various gardening applications.

Brand: 千吉


Material: Wood


Color: Brown


Product Dimensions: 2.13"L x 1.5"W x 5.91"H


Style: Tool


Brand: ‎千吉


Material: ‎Wood


Color: ‎Brown


Product Dimensions: ‎2.13"L x 1.5"W x 5.91"H


Style: ‎Tool


Included Components: ‎Blade


Cutting Width: ‎2E+1 Millimeters


Manufacturer: ‎Fujiwara Sangyo


Part Number: ‎40mmX150mm_SML


Item Weight: ‎1.41 ounces


Item model number: ‎40mmX150mm_SML


Is Discontinued By Manufacturer: ‎No


Size: ‎Standard


Item Package Quantity: ‎1


Number Of Pieces: ‎1


Blade Edge: ‎Compound Bevel


Special Features: ‎Lightweight


Batteries Included?: ‎No


Batteries Required?: ‎No


Date First Available: September 5, 2012


Frequently asked questions

If you place your order now, the estimated arrival date for this product is: Saturday, Jan 18

Yes, absolutely! You may return this product for a full refund within 30 days of receiving it.

To initiate a return, please visit our Returns Center.

View our full returns policy here.

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Top Amazon Reviews


  • What, how, why!
I tapped the blade in very lightly and used this to get paper thin wood curls. Leaves a glossy, smooth finish. Tap the hammer on the wood, not the metal to back it out. Here's the weird part: on my other anglo-german-american type plains I tape the other end of the plane (the wood) to seat the blade and make it stick out a little farther. On this plane (and I've seen tons of videos on Youtube of people doing it this way) I just LIGHTLY tapped the blade downward to get it to stick out more. This plane has no pins and no wedge: it's just the blade against the wood in a very tight fit. This is how an elderly Japanese woodworker on a Kotaro Tanaka video did it as well. You'll never hurt the blade by tapping the blunt end of it--then again you'll never crack the wood shoulders of a plane by tapping on the front or back of the plane, LOL. I own a bunch of planes now: various old metal, huge two-foot antique wood ones I restored, a Hock/Krenov kit I built years ago, and now this Japanese plane which produces curls as nicely as the others. You pull instead of push. It's very light weight and responsive. I tend to run planes more side to side, left to right on thinner pieces of wood as opposed to pushing straight away from my body and this allows that technique as well. It's just like the photo: sticker, single blade with no chip breaker and light wood. Really clean and simple. The sticker says to tap blade to extend and tap end of wood to retract. Tap SOFTLY: you won't hurt the blade, but you might theoretically, break the wood shoulders. Tape, test, tap, test, tap, test and I was making shavings. Nice shavings. The only way to get a better deal is to: buy old blades at garage sales and build your own (which is fun). Why use a plane? Because ALL sandpaper leaves scratches. It's true that finer and finer grades of sandpaper leaves finer and harder to see and feel scratched, but why not just swoosh the plane once and get a glossy, smooth, no tear-out, non-fuzzy, no scratch mirror finish! It's way faster, the curls smell nice as opposed to messy, unhealthy sawdust and the finish is easily proven to be smoother. Look at it! Feel it! Look at it with a magnifying glass! Glass smoothness instead of fuzzy matte sanded finish you have to put a THICK glossy chemical finish on to make look nice. Try this: run a plane across the edge of a board. It looks great! Now sand that glassy edge with the finest grade sandpaper you have handy: it'll make it look worse! Planer is faster, easier, cheaper, smoother cleaner than paper. Sawdust is for saws, not fine finishing tools. Sandpaper makes me sneeze, planes release the smell of the wood (even old wood). Nice! Mike from Detroit ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on February 20, 2017 by M1K3 FR0M D3TR01T

  • very high quality and worth 5 times the price.
Totally worth it. I've been a craftsman for over 30 years - I've had my own one man wood and metal fabrication shop since 2004. I make a lot of my own hand and power tools (wood lathe, table saw and belt sanders). I currently use the hell out of my little Stanley block plane and an imported Chinese jack plane similar to a Stanley number 4 in the construction of recurve, bamboo backed archery bows and knife handles for my hand forged knives. I've been meditating on building some hand planes out of some really hard maple scraps I have that are around 2"x2"x10. I'm thinking that they'll end up either Japanese style or modified Krenov style. When I saw this for under 10 bucks, I thought it would give me some ideas at the very least when I finally make my own. It arrived 3 days after my online purchase. It arrived SCARY sharp. Now, among other things, I make hand forged knives with a semi traditional Japanese charcoal pit forge (which, of course, I made myself). I know how to make and sharpen a knife so it will push cut through paper. The iron in this plane arrived as sharp as I could get it with my dead flat granite sharpening slab and sharpening up to 1200 grit sandpaper. The wood looks like Japanese white oak (shiroi kashi) but not as hard or high quality as my Japanese white oak bokken. That being said, there are no knots or imperfections that I can see. I can't dig my fingernail into my white oak bokken but I can, a little, with this plane. I've included some pics of the one I got. You can see in one of the pics where I dug my fingernail in. Overall, this little plane seems much more delicate than my antique Stanley block plane and, I think, will require a more delicate touch when using it. However, it seems to have a very high quality of craftsmanship in its construction and I suspect it will be replacing my old trusty block plane for most jobs. Bottom line: if you need a block plane, I recommend this one wholeheartedly. Get it, then increase your skill level if necessary and use a light touch when using it. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 29, 2018 by U.S. Wood and Metal U.S. Wood and Metal

  • Excellent. Wish I'd gotten one years ago. Impressive sharp, ready to use. Solid. Beautiful, really.
This thing is amazing. Fine workmanship. Blade is tight and functions as designed. Very sharp. Usually we don't get delivered sharp tools. Very nice surprise. Basic but solid tool. Not as refined as a metal block plane of English style, but very usable and effective. I am notably impressed. I would highly recommend this product, especially if you do finer woodwork. It is a basic, fine tool which every woodworker would love. The simplicity, yet effectiveness of this tool would be hard to over emphasize. Fantastic value. ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on December 6, 2021 by Arthur L Burbank

  • Works very well for chamfering edges and smoothing corners
I loved that it was razor sharp right out of the box. Very effective and inexpensive little tool.
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2024 by David R Gallman

  • Help I'm turning Japanese
Most Japanese planes r ready 2 go oob, not this one. The iron angle was stuck and crooked. The bock itself had to be prepared tho not hard- time consuming. The area behind the iron also was not flat so that l. needed work. The blade was sharp but the very end was j shaped & appears to be roller sharpened not flat. So future sharpening will bee work. As of yet can't get a thin shaving the width of blade. You getb what you pay 4 ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on January 16, 2018 by Tyy Daymon

  • Perfect scrub plane
I've been using Japanese handsaws for years, but only recently got into Japanese planes. I bought this as a project, with the intention of regrinding the blade to make a little scrub plane. I tried it out of the box (the photo is before honing!) and was surprised how well it worked. The dai needed minimal fitting. I flattened and honed the iron: it's quite thin, but appears to be laminated and takes a decent edge. I gave it a couple taps with the hammer and it was ready to work. In softwoods there's no tearout or chatter. Note that it is easy to set the iron too deep, and harder to loosen it than most traditional Japanese planes I've worked with (lightly striking the back of the dai doesn't do it). ... show more
Reviewed in the United States on October 23, 2021 by Outis Outis

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