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1) A metal jointer plane for the assembly of the top and the back. I bought a relatively cheap Anant (Stanley copy from India) and its doing its job absolutely perfect.
2) A Irvin Sloane thumb Plane. Its in use on all the interior work.
3) My favorite (see photo) A Macassar Ebony relatively small Chineese wooden plane which can be used both pull and push. Fantastic general purpose plane. I dont like heavy metal planes for the majority of works when building guitars. They are for doing larger works
Last Some good stones, guides and knowing how to sharpen and setting up the plane is far more important than having a fancy tool.
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Until recently i've used a stanley jointers plane, but the result was no longer satisfactorly as it was hard to set up the plane for a fine and well quartered cut. I asked one of my friends which is a carpenter how to solve the problem and he brought me a handmade japanese plane to check out. The plane works on pull rather than on push and the cut is very, very fine. A couple of pull-cuts with this plane and i had a perfectly straight, well-matching joint. And while i've lost a couple of mm's while planing with the stanley plane, i've lost less than a mm with the japanese plane. This experience convinced me to leave european planes aside and to use a japanese jointers plane for this job as from now on. Good japanese tools are somewhat pricy, but they are worthwhile the investment as you'll have to buy one only for your lifetime and they save you a lot of hassle.