woodbrains":1sogabkf said:Yes I do and I'm not the only one. Cutting mortices for locks in doors are done this way. There are many hand tool skills books that show mortices done this way. (Roger Holmes, and excellent maker trained by Alan Peters shows it done this way, my dad did it this way) There is evidence in lots of old furniture that it can be done this way.
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A couple of proper mortice chisel will be the best course to take for future work , but this wasn't the question either. If we are just going to recommend more equipment, then a hollow chisel Morticer would be good too, and bench top models are quite affordable these days. But the question was how to get smoother with BE chisels. Using the chisels as designed to, rather than trying to do something they are not ideal for would be the most logical course of action.
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If you can't keep a drill brace upright, then you might not be able to keep a BE chisel upright either. both just require a bit of application and practice and a bit of tape will gauge the depth, that is not uncommon.
Just to be clear, I'm not interested what books say or who was trained by who and does what... In a subject as diverse and confused as woodworking, the "appeal to authority" is even more fallacious than it would normally be. Lock mortices are much like the large mortices worked in framing applications, in that there's an awful lot of material to remove so working them with a chisel alone will be sub-optimal so another approach is required (and since you mentioned machines, when I was making doors, we used a chain morticer to cut the lock mortices; No point mucking about, just get it done in 30 seconds).
You seem to have this idea that everyone's BE chisels are thise fine paring chisels, in which case I don't know what world you're in, but it sure ain't this one... Whilst Bevel-Edged can refer to a chisel with no or barely any lands on the side, it increasingly refers to a chisel a little thinner than a firmer with the upper edges eased but a significant land on the sides still.... you have to spend a fair chunk of of money to get anything else.
Finally, I rather get the impression that you're actually trying to be rude under a veil of helpfulness with your edit... I'm quite capable of both drilling straight and holding a chisel straight. However, the latter is rather easier than the former when you're talking about a relatively small hole to be made and even a tiny inaccuracy (i.e. the kind of thing that will happen when you're relying on the human body to keep something dead perpendicular to a flat plane) with the angle of the bit can mar the edge of the mortice quite easily; In my mind there is absolutely no point making the job any harder than it needs to be, Occam's razor and all that jazz, and drilling is both time consuming and awkward compared to just getting on with it, so long as you can deliver a good hard mallet blow, you'll be done chopping long before you'd have finished mucking about with a drill.