The Stanley Plane is used to shape wood, although the actual tool is made out of metal and wood. Although, these days the tool is not used, it is most likely made fully out of metal.
A Stanley Plane can be purchased at the official Stanley Plane website. Provide an electronic payment as well as a shipping address in order to receive your plane.
The Stanley No. 56 was a six inches Core Box Plane. It was manufactured from 1909 until 1923 and was made of cast iron and rosewood handle.
I have just acquired a Revonoc plane, thinking that it was a Stanley No. 23 transitional plane, prior to cleaning. The markings are now clear. Except for a Revonoc marked thick tapered blade and the Revonoc stamp in the front, it is indistiquishable from a Stanley No 23. Other sources also credit Stanley, and in my view is in fact made by Stanley.
On the blades
The fan blades.
The blades are shaped like air plane propellers and use the airs force to push on the shape of the blades.
We can find an inclined plane on the blades of the fan, and wheel and axle in the centre of the motor
If you consider one blade and extrapolate it, it becomes an archemides screw (an inclined plane wrapped around a core.)
Engineers refer to it as high speed steel.
The scissors as a whole would be a lever, but the blades in particular are wedges - an inclined plane if you will.The scissors' blades are sharpened into wedges, and the arms that are squeezed together are levers.
well it depends on the type of stanley knife. with the stanley utility knife no.199 which is a fixed blade knife uses die casting to make the body of the knife and the blades are stamped out and sharpened.