Ok, I’ll be the fall guy here. Would you mind explaining please Ttrees what an influenced shaving is?
Lol, should you be traveling to PA then I think you will find out fairly soon, although
I did give you a link before to the "setting a cap iron" article on a wood central article.
I've tried my best to show influenced shavings
which a smoother was designed to do. (if necessary), so that probably covers 70% of all timbers anyone might have.
Planing some wet ash rounds recently, and the cap iron needed to be set far away from the edge, haven't too much of an answer for that,
at best I could reckon that the through shavings had enough strength to keep together
and resist tearing, but a pure guess, I haven't mucked about with much ash, but be interesting to see the fancy flooring offcuts is anyway similar.
One could see straight shavings, so guessing the cap likely could have had effect/influence, much what looks like what Follansbee's cuts.
Strength of the shaving "breaking the chip" without need for any "pressing down of the fibres" with the mouth.
Could waffle on about "influenced" shavings, Kato & Kawai video, its an old Japanese? video of an experiment where they rigged up
a double iron (like on a Bailey plane)
and experimented with the cap iron, there is no mouth involved, so takes it out of the equation.
Never mind that, just look at the shavings, straight, burnished, greasy, crinkled, for an idea of what an influenced shaving looks like.
Then look at the work, or for a surprise, look at the work of the hardest examples of tricky grain you can find, for a glass like finish. (chatoyance)
Whether that's your bag or not, is not the important part.
Being able to plane timbers without tearing out is.
I've tried to demonstrate this in a normal occurrence for me, some knotty pitch pine
and some of my iroko, but I obviously failed.
No mad sharpening either, if it cuts hair its good enough, and if relying on sharpness for this technique, the cap iron isn't having enough influence.
I like mine honed just over 50 degrees, like in the photo what Adam posted from some old book, the steeper this is honed at, the further it can be set away from the edge.
Thinner panels are a perfect example though, in that you likely need to take a light cut
to suit the close set cap iron, should you have less than easy working timbers.
I think for anyone who want's to get the best out of their plane, and is planing thinner stock, will find anything which will deflect the work a hindrance, i.e wedges or dogs bending the work.
should they need to use a fine shaving like above, as pressing down on the work
to keep it in the cut will likely break the finer shaving of the smoother plane, leaving a lump which might cause some to advance the cut,
and thus have a horrible time trying to plane using the cap iron to its potential, or it just not working.
Maybe you folks would like to see both the winding sticks and a flat bench approach?
Well I haven't seen Brain do any checks on the bench, clickedy clacks or pivoting,
but reckon the technique might be in some more of his videos.