robin wood
Bushcrafter (boy, I've got a lot to say!)
A fellow by the name of Joseph Whitworth popularized this technique in the 1800s.![]()
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Joseph_Whitworth
Sorry to take the thread off topic but I am interested in flattening stones so had to follow this interesting thread up. In fact Whitworth changed the method from grinding two planes together to a method of scraping the surface to achieve increased flatness.
This is the first paragraph of his paper on the subject
"The method hitherto adopted[1] in getting up plane surfaces has been (after filing to the straight edge) to grind them together, with emery. In some cases it has been customary to try them previously on a surface plate, and to go over them with the scraping instrument; but they have always been ground afterwards. The surface plate itself has been invariably treated in the same manner.[2] The process of grinding is, in fact, regarded as indispensable wherever truth is required, yet that of scraping is calculated to produce a higher degree of truth than has ever been attained by grinding. In reference to both processes a great degree of misconception prevails, the effect of which is materially to retard the progress of improvement, and which it is of great importance to remove. While grinding is universally regarded as indispensable to a finished surface, it is, in fact, positively detrimental. On the other hand, the operation of scraping, hitherto so much neglected, constitutes the only certain means we possess for the attainment of accuracy. " source