@BarbaraT just a suggestion. Looking at your photos, the chipped blade appears to be a (hope I don’t offend by saying this) rough ground finish. Two things reduce blade edge strength, the first is the undercut created by the hollow ground right at the edge. The second is a ‘rough’ edge creates ‘teeth’ that aren’t very strong. Both if these issues are resolved by a quick few stokes on a stone of your choice to produce a polished secondary bevel edge that’s at say 30 degrees
@worn thumbs has already highlighted that the chip breaker needs a bit of work…..well a lot! The front edge should sit flat on the blade without any gaps to stop shavings getting trapped and fully support the blade.
@worn thumbs has already highlighted that the chip breaker needs a bit of work…..well a lot! The front edge should sit flat on the blade without any gaps to stop shavings getting trapped and fully support the blade.