Cheshirechappie
Established Member
Just to clarify something. There are two separate issues here - cap-iron settings used to control tear-out, and flexibility of cutting irons when paired with different cap-iron designs, and how that affects their behaviour in use.
Using a cap-iron to control tear-out by adjusting it's distance set from the cutting iron edge won't have any significant effect on a cutting iron's flexibility. It will affect the timber ahead of the cutting edge, and consequently the surface finish achieved. That's been discussed in great depth elsewhere, but is NOT the issue my comments above relate to.
How a cutting iron is supported in a plane when paired with different styles of cap-iron WILL affect it's response in use when the cutting edge enters the wood; in other words, when a load or force are applied to the cutting edge. The different details of clamping will directly affect how the cutting iron's flexibility is controlled - the way in which the cap-iron transmits the lever cap force to the cutting iron, and thus how the cutting iron beds against the frog surface. The lack of contact between cap-iron and cutting iron, and between cutting iron and frog surface, with some cutting iron/cap-iron pairings is what can lead to 'blade flutter' or 'chatter' from thinner, more flexible cutting irons. That's the subject of my comments.
Using a cap-iron to control tear-out by adjusting it's distance set from the cutting iron edge won't have any significant effect on a cutting iron's flexibility. It will affect the timber ahead of the cutting edge, and consequently the surface finish achieved. That's been discussed in great depth elsewhere, but is NOT the issue my comments above relate to.
How a cutting iron is supported in a plane when paired with different styles of cap-iron WILL affect it's response in use when the cutting edge enters the wood; in other words, when a load or force are applied to the cutting edge. The different details of clamping will directly affect how the cutting iron's flexibility is controlled - the way in which the cap-iron transmits the lever cap force to the cutting iron, and thus how the cutting iron beds against the frog surface. The lack of contact between cap-iron and cutting iron, and between cutting iron and frog surface, with some cutting iron/cap-iron pairings is what can lead to 'blade flutter' or 'chatter' from thinner, more flexible cutting irons. That's the subject of my comments.