Well Jacob, I can only speak for the 3 Bailey type planes I own (2 (English Stanleys and a circa 1918 51/2). The flats machined on the sole behind the mouth on the 1918 model bring the sole thickness to quite a bit less than 3mm, while the two English planes are ~3mm thick at that point (I have no way to get an exact measurement without a lot of faffing about, but they are in that ball park).
The thinnest blade I have at present is 2.76mm thick. So lets do some trig, rounding the blade thickness to 2.5mm. I come up with figures like this:
View attachment 99534
So both by calculation and such empirical evidence as I'm able to muster (sticking a feeler gauge up under the blade till it stops), the blade bevel extends well above the sole on any of my planes. Given the above figures, I would have to expose the cutting edge of the blade ~2mm before the top of the blade bevel would extend past the bottom of the frog. I'm unlikely ever to need to do that.
Your planes may be different; if the soles are machined a little thicker than mine and you're using thinner 'original' blades, maybe you
can get the back of your blades resting on the sole at normal blade esposures. My question is, would that confer any great benefits? It could make adjustment awkward if the frog is pulled back for a large mouth because the blade bevel might foul the sole bevel. If the frog is properly machined and sitting firmly on its receiving flats on the sole, it can be considered a structural part of the sole & will give as much support & damping as required. To my way of thinking it is not necessary & possibly not desirable that the blade rest on the sole.
The old infills with their grossly thick blades needed a 'blade block' to increase the thickness behind the mouth & ensure the blade was resting on metal.
Cheers,
Edit, before anyone else points it out, I should have used the other arm of the blade triangle (5.4mm) in my clculation. This is the crucial dimension as it's parallel to the blade bed, so the blade back will meet the frog 5.4mm from the tip of the sole bevel in this example. Still comfortably above the sole....