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Ha-Ganna 葉鉋 : Making Dai

ha-ganna blade fitting complete

Ever since I started doing kumiko work I have wanted to try out ha-ganna (葉鉋). Ha-ganna are specialty planes for cutting specific angles on kumiko pattern pieces. For larger projects with a lot of pattern pieces they really speed up the process by allowing you to mass produce parts vs cutting each part individually using a jig. Ha-ganna always seemed like mysterious tools. I would occasionally see a video or picture of someone using them but never had an opportunity to see them in person. At around $700 per plane they are also really expensive. So for a long time I thought they were too expensive. Then a couple months ago I was browsing through a tool dealers site and came across their listings for ha-ganna. The shop had an option to purchase ha-ganna blades separate from the wooden dai. The price was much cheaper so I jumped on it and bought the 4 blades they had available, and decided I would make my own dai.

Blade bedding angle

When the blades arrived I started to scratch my head wondering how to proceed with making the dai. Standard kanna have the blade set at an 8/10 slope (around 38.7 degrees). Having never seen a ha-ganna in person one of the first questions I had was what slope to set the blade in the dai. I searched the internet and found a couple of pictures that seemed to indicate that the standard 8/10 slope is used, but I didn’t turn up anything definitive. I’m still not positive what slope is typically used, so if anyone reading this has a ha-ganna I’d love to hear what slope you blade is set at. In the end I figured that an 8/10 would be the safest bet, and at that slope everything seemed to work out just fine.

ha-ganna dai layout

Laying out the Dai

Once I decided on the bedding angle of the blade, I started laying out the dai. I purchased 22.5, 30, 45, and 60 degree blades, and each varies in width. For each plane, I measured the width of the blade and cut the dai so that there would be 8-10mm of material remaining on each side of the blade. From the outside edge of each side of the blade, I marked in 3-4mm for the area that will become the groove that wedges the blade tight.

ha-ganna dai layout close up

Cutting the Dai

I used a combination of drills and chisels to rough out the majority of the cut.

ha-ganna rough cut out
ha-ganna bottom of dai after rough cutting

Cutting into the side of the dai to establish where the blade rests against was tricky, especially for the narrower planes. The narrowest blade is only about 17mm wide, meaning the actual opening in the dai for that blade is only about 11-12 mm. So, I needed a really skinny saw to be able to cut the groove within that narrow opening. I didn’t have a saw small enough, so I ended up modifying a replaceable blade saw that I had lying around. It looks crude but did the job.

modified saw for cutting dai groove

Below you can see the cuts made with the modified saw. You need to make these cuts as accurately as possible since they ultimately establish the final slope of the blade. They also need to be parallel for the blade to have good contact along both sides.

ha-ganna dai groove cut

With the saw cuts finished I continued to remove the last bits of material before test fitting the blade.

ha-ganna dai starting to fit the blade
ha-ganna dai bottom side

Fitting the Blade

As soon as I was able to insert the blade into the dai, I began applying pencil and a bit of camelia oil to the the back of the blade. The pencil clearly shows the areas where the blade makes contact with the dai. Then it’s just a matter of shaving the areas that are touching, reinserting the blade, and rinse and repeat. I fit the blade until I got it close enough to the mouth of the dai to lightly tap it out with a hammer. This is the exact same process you go through when setting up a regular kanna.

ha-ganna testing blade fit

Here’s a progress shot from fitting the 45 degree blade. You can clearly see the areas of contact between the dai and the blade left by the pencil and oil.

ha-ganna adjusting the blade fit

For trimming the areas of contact, I used a combination of small 3 and 6mm bench chisels. I also used these little sotomaru-nomi 外丸鑿 (outside-round chisels), which were really handy.

6mm sotomaru nomi
ha-ganna setup sotomaru chisel

Below is the dai in progress for the narrowest ha-ganna. The blade for this ha-ganna was made at a 30 degree angle, for cutting 60 degree kumiko pieces. This dai was the trickiest to make since the blade was the smallest. However, with the modified saw blade for the side cuts and the small sotomaru-nomi for fitting the blade, things came together nicely.

ha-ganna fitting the blade
ha-ganna blade set

Here is the finished set of ha-ganna, for cutting 22.5, 30, 45, and 60 degree kumiko pattern pieces. Overall the process was nearly the same as cutting a dai for a standard flat kanna blade, with a few added difficulties due the the angle of the blades and the narrow openings. But after cutting the first dai, the process became much clearer and the remaining dai were pretty straightforward.

ha-ganna finished

Adjustable Fence

Next up I started fabricating the adjustable fences that attach to the side of each ha-ganna. For each fence I started by simply gluing up an L-shaped piece with some 15mm thick oak.

ha-ganna fence gluing

After the glue dried I clamped the fence to the dai, and drilled through the fence and into the dai for attaching a pair of threaded rods. I used epoxy to glue the threaded rods into the dai. Once the epoxy set, I threaded on a couple of standard nuts and wing nuts.

ha-ganna fence attachement

Ha-ganna that I’ve seen sold online always have a large diameter wheel-like nut on the inside of the fence, which I assume makes it really easy to adjust and fine-tune the fence. I searched all over for that kind of hardware but came up with nothing, so in the end I opted for a standard nut on the inside; not that sexy but it serves the purpose and ultimately isn’t that hard to adjust.

And here is the finished 60 degree ha-ganna.

ha-ganna

That pretty much covers the dai making part of this ha-ganna setup journey. Next up I’ll cover how I went about sharpening and adjusting the blades, so stay tuned.

Thanks for reading.

cutting kumiko pattern pieces with ha-ganna

27 thoughts on “Ha-Ganna 葉鉋 : Making Dai”

    1. Yeah I’m pretty sure. I ordered a blade from the same shop (Pro Shop Hokuto) a few years ago when I was in the states. At the moment however I’m not sure what the shipping situation is heading out of Japan. For a while regular post wasn’t going out to the US due to covid, but I’m not sure if that is still the case or not.

  1. Great post. I love your site.

    In reply to the last guy I found the blades on ProShopHokuto but only see 3 of 4 of the possible blades available. My understanding is that you need all blades to make a set that does everything you need.

    1. Thanks Anthony,

      How many and what blades you need really depends on the patterns that you are making. Square grid kumiko patterns typically require different angles than the diamond/hexagonal patterns, so it actually can require many more ha-ganna to truly be able to cut every kind of pattern/angle. That said you can still do a lot with just a couple of ha-ganna. For example for the yae-ura-hana-kikko pattern that I posted about a while back, I only needed the 60 and 30 degree ha-ganna.

      -Jon

  2. I’ve got a silly question. I don’t understand the geometry on the ha-ganna. The angle of the blade, say a 45 ha-ganna. Is that the angle of the groove that is planned, or is that the angle of one side of the groove. Example, I cut a groove into a piece of wood with the 45 ha-ganna and put a perpendicular line through the point where the two sides meet. What is that angle?

    1. You have the right idea. For the 45 degree ha-ganna, the blade is shaped so that it leaves a 90 v-cut in the wood, such that one half of that v-cut is 45. For the 30 degree ha-ganna, the blade leaves a 60 degree v-cut, and so forth.

      Eventually I plan to write about sharpening the blades and will talk more about the angle of the actual blades themselves vs. the cutting angle. Since the blades are bedded in the dai at 38 degrees, there is a fair amount of fine tuning required to adjust the bevel of the blade so that the resulting cut leaves the desired angle. It’s a tricky process to say the least, and I’m still figuring much of this out myself.

      -Jon

      1. Excellent. Hopefully that sharpening article will be out by the time my 30 and 60 degree blades arrive. I will be making my own Dai, too. Availability and cost are driving me to this learning.

        I have a dream “art” piece to make, and I have come to realize there is no way to do it without the high speed productivity of the Ha Ganna. Well… there is a way, but it involves too much monotony, planing, disk sanding, and exposing my fingers to further injury. 🙂

  3. How large a diameter thumb wheel would you require? I found a 30mm diameter, 10mm thick 1/4 x 20 thread knob for use on camera tripods. If your rods are only 15mm below the top… ? Amazon, small rig 30mm thumb wheel.

    Which brings me to my question? What thread pitch did you use? 1/4×20? Or a 32 thread machine screw?

    1. Very cool Thanks! In my case I used a metric pitch, I believe it was an M5 thread but I need to double check. That thumb wheel you found is a fantastic idea though.
      -Jon

  4. Hi, could you please give the name and address of the company where you got the blades for the ha-ganna planes please ,I really enjoyed reading this information, thankyou from David Holt in Carlton in Lindrick, Nottinghamshire, England.

    1. Did you manage to get the ha-ganna blades. I too am searching, the pro shop hokoto, seems hard to find them and unable to use the contact page

  5. Jon, how did you ever find Pro Shop Hokuto? That’s quite an impressive product list — except most everything is Sold Out. :-). How easy was it to do business with them? The prices are really attractive.

    1. I found them just googling around for Japanese tools. I’ve had no problems ordering from them, and even when I was in the States and spoke no Japanese ordering was no problem. We were able to communicate with simple English with no issues.

  6. 1. How long are the threaded rods you used, and are you satisfied with your choice of length?
    2. Can you provide the dimensions of your 30 and 60 degree Dai?
    3. Anything you would change in design, now that you’ve used yours for a while? Specifically wondering if you really needed the lower portion of the fence… I.e. the piece that acts as edge guide, the full 15mm thick?
    4. I’m about to commit to my threaded knobs with 1/4 x 20 threading. Your M5 are 32 TPI. Would 20 TOI be insufficiently fine-tuneable, in your eyes? If I can find a 30mm diameter knob with M5 (32) or M6 (25) I will go that route for more precise tuning.

    My 30/60 blades shipped June 21, so I’m getting closer to actually following in your footsteps. I’m trying to avoid any potholes. 🙂

    Thanks!

    1. Hey Rob,
      In answer to your questions:
      1) The threaded rods are around 150 mm long I believe. They are more than adequate for length, and could probably be shorter. That said, the extra length doesn’t interfere with the use in my opinion, so I left them long in case I ever need to cut some larger kumiko pieces.
      2) I don’t have my ha-ganna with me as I’m working away from home at the moment, but I essentially added 6-8 mm to the side of each blade when calculating the width of my dai. So if the blade itself was 30mm wide I cut my dai 42-46 wide, to ensure adequate material remained on each side of the blade. When cutting dai some people leave less material, but I’d recommend not going less than 5 mm on each side of the blade.
      3) At this point there’s not a whole lot that I would change. The edge guide probably doesn’t need to be the full 15mm thick, but the material I used was store bought at 15 mm thick. I left it at that thickness since I was making these ha-ganna in my home and didn’t have machines available to do any milling.
      4) I think 1/4 x 20 threaded rod would probably do just fine. If you were able to find a finer threaded rod that may be better, but with a little care and attention to detail I don’t think you’d have any trouble with adjustments using 1/4 x 20 thread.

      Good luck with your ha-ganna build!

      Best,
      Jon

  7. Hi Jon,

    I have started laying out my Dai(s?). How far from the end is the mouth opening. Or, another measurement that would give me the same result: How far is the blade apex from the end of the Dai, on top?(if you measure from the end of the Dai to the underside of the acute angle formed between the blade and the top of the Dai.)

    I could guess, use feel, or use a ratio from my other Kanna, but thought I’d ask. How did you decide where to have the blade protrude?

    1. Hey Rob,

      I started laying out the dai by marking the location of the ha-guchi (the mouth where the blade protrudes on the bottom of the dai). Typical kanna use a ratio of 2:3 for the ha-guchi (with 3 parts in front of the ha-guchi line, 2 parts behind). When I drew the slope lines from the ha-guchi line up the side of the dai, and marked across the top, I found the the apex of the blade became too close to the end of the dai. So I ended up moving the blade forward. Again, my apologies as I don’t have my ha-ganna with me at the moment to give you a definitive measurement, but I believe I tried to leave around 30mm of space between the apex and the end of the dai. To my eye, that amount of space seemed about right to ensure the would be plenty of material remaining. If the apex gets too close to the end, there is a greater likelihood that the dai could split when tapping the blade in and out.

      Hope that helps,
      Best,
      Jon

  8. Rob,

    Love your work and articles !

    I would love to do this but I can’t find the plane irons, any help would be appreciated. I went to the site listed in the comments but heck if I can figure it out even in english.

  9. Hi Jon, wonderful article, thank you for taking the time to write it and answering everyone’s questions. My question to everyone reading this and planning on making all 4 is, would you consider making an extra set. I am disabled and love doing Kumiko patters but would find them much easier with these plans. Due to my hand issues, I am unable to make them as the accuracy would be an issue for me. I would be happy to cover your expenses and add a payment to you for your time. Is there anyone who would be willing to assist me?
    If you think my post is inappropriate Jon, please delete it. Thanks
    Robyn

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