You’re not alone.
If you’ve got a 100-year-old plane with a missing screw, you’re not crazy — and you’re not the only one.
The truth is simple: Most vintage hand planes reuse the same three screws over and over again.
The most common accessory screw. Used on depth stops, fences, side plates, and clamp points. If something won’t lock down, this is usually it. 78, 66, 78, 98, 99, 79,
A little more beefy. Used for clamping rods and higher torque applications. Common where strength matters. 45, 71, 55, 50,
The small tote screw. Also used in fixture-style applications — totes, Stanley 67 guides, frog mounts to the body.
If you know what you need, grab a single screw above.
If you’re unsure, scroll down and look at the screw pack.
We also offer a sample pack that has the most common screw threads for hand planes. Learn more. Come back and get exactly what you need.
The part hunt is over.
— Anthony
Woodyah
