HR Lamb, will likely be able to refurbish your plate(s), but some distance from you and probably expensive if you wanted them to do the scraping as well.
https://www.hrlambandson.co.uk/
My own 12" square plate seems to just be ground judging by the marks on it, and is fine for marking out, but when I came to try and refurbish a little Herbert Junior surface grinder I picked up, I found that I was struggling as far as using it with blue to check for flatness.
Fortunately I also found a 24" square one, with a bit of water damage, but where it was good, it was very good, which made life a lot easier.
Like you, I'd watched quite a few videos before embarking on this project, but had never tried scraping seriously before.
I wasted a lot of time and effort in trying to come up with a usable scraper which holds an edge. I tried the traditional end of a file, and also a commercial steel scraper, but spent for ever sharpening it.
Next plan was a holder for lumps of carbide. It worked OK, but again I struggled to hold a sharp edge, due to using the wrong grades of carbide; tough yes, but didn't hold a keen edge.
Eventually I tried making a scraper out of some carbide paint scraper blades, which worked well, both taking and retaining a keen edge.
https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/282140923796
The ones I used were similar to these, but came in a red box from a different supplier.
Sandvik do sell the correct inserts, you can make your on handle/holder but I baulked at the price; in the end it might have been more cost/time effective to buy a proper insert.
The Herbert job took a while to be fair, but seems to have come out OK in the end. I'm guessing I probably took off at least a paper cup full of cast iron shavings, as some of the surfaces were up to about 15 thou down, so lots of work to make them flat again.
There's a lot of photos in my Flickr album, many of them being different views of the setups for measuring and scraping. Each photo should have a basic writeup if you click on it.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/peak4/albums/72157715281085636
Not showing this as a tutorial, more to show that if I can do it without formal training, so can others.
This video (first one in a series) isn't me, but gave me a bit of inspiration to tackle to job during the first lockdown.
Bill
Edited By peak4 on 03/08/2021 02:19:10