My two penny’s worth, and I am providing popcorn!
I have tried a spiral head, I settled on a Tersa block having come form a standard bladed machine. Most professional shops seem to go for the Tersa system in my observations. But the interesting question is why do spiral blocks make the claim to be free from tear out? all system use a blade spinning around to cut the stuff, no soecial widgets or voodoo magic gizmos. So there must be some difference between the blades used.
My theory is based upon the old way you dealt with tear out. You would either scrape, or use a York pitched plane with tight mouth etc etc. for difficult timbers. The important bit is that a high pitch reduces tear out. Spiral heads use carbide blades, a very brittle substance that needs a lot of support for the cutting edge. Hence, the cutters have a high angle, I’m not sure what the angle is, but I know it’s higher than the angle sharpened in say a HSS blade. So, the only difference between different cutting actions is the ability of the bkade to break the chip before it tears out. The higher the cutting the angle, the quicker the chip breaks reducing tear out. Small cutters reduces the power requirements of the machine, a solid long carbide cutter fitted in a standard machine will need a lot more power than a spiral block that only has circa 14mm of cutter engaged at anyone time. Hence the reason they are made as a spiral, not I believe because it affects the cutt8ng action, as a by product the chips it makes are smaller which is sold as an advantage.
I use M42 cutters in my Tersa block, they have a higher angle than a HSS blade and in the main, don’t tear out irrespective of the direction of the grain. It’s not as high an angle as carbide. But, I can also put carbide cutters for my Tersa block which will I believe give me the same tear out capability as a spiral block. I can’t take as deep a cut as they are long straight cutters, and use more power.
In conclusion, the cost and convenience of a Tersa block IMO far out weighs that or a spiral block. You cannot just rotate or replace a cutter on a spiral block without generating tramways. To avoid this you have to turn or replace all the cutters. You will have to sand the tramways out. A Tersa block you can swap all the blades in less than a minute, it takes hours on a spiral block. A set of M42 blades 405mm (16”) 4 off is circa 20 for a fresh set of knives. (£40 for a the knives, 2 setups) 200+ carbide cutters......well better sit down when you need to buy them!
If the blade is inserted into a Tersa block which requires no tools to change then it’s not coming out in use, in a spiral block you have to be sure you have tightened up every single tiny torks head bolt, assuming you haven’t lost it and after cleaning all the gunk from where the cutter is seated. Not a job for an apprentice.