I have been thinking and experimenting for some years, around the essential functional differences found in Japnese and infill planes, that contribute to a woodworking advantage over the modern cast iron type. Certainly a thicker blade helps. A Japanese blade may be 8x thicker and so 8x8x8 times* stiffer!
Like others posting here, mouths were widened and cap irons adapted, so they could still engage the adjuster when fitted with a thicker blade. Thick 'laminated' blades were made from a Samurai replacement blade, bonded to the detempered original with Locktite. The result was interesting enough to justify purchase of 5mm Hock and Lie Neilsen blades when these became available.
I beleive this to be important, for cutting loads the tip of the blade. This force can be resolved into two parts - one along the blade, pushing it against the adjuster, and the other at right angles, pushing the blade down into the work. This results in a tendency for the blade to pivot on the heel of the bevel, the edge digging in, and the body of the blade lifting from the frog**. This may be clearly demonstrated on a standard blade, by planing with a clock gauge on the blade itself, 50 mm or so up from the heel.
Matters are made worse by the standard 'bent metal' cap iron. Screwing this to a flat blade will bend the blade into a curve. This is not removed when the pair are fitted to the frog and clamped by the lever cap. The blade itself contacts the frog only close to the heel and under the lever of the lever cap. A chatter*** tool.....The two piece cap iron now made by Clifton is designed to prevent this, and also to provide a third clamping point.
The LN chipbreaker is well made, but still similar in principle to the bent metal original. No doubt that screwing the LN to a flat blade will cause the blade to bend (albeit less than the original). However the LN chipbreaker looks similar to that of an infill plane. Infill planes appear to have a much shorter lever cap (with a screw) which seems to clamp down, well up from the cutting edge, at the point where the Bailey blade is most lifted from the frog. When the infill plane's screw is tightened down for work, it may bring cap iron, blade, and frog all into intimate contact, to make a rigid whole. Could the infill experts comment on this guess, please?
A recent post referred to the work of Prof. Kato on the effect of chipbreakers on surface finish, which contains some photos which augment those in Leonard Lee's sharpening book. Kato's paper implies that the cap iron, or chipbreaker, should be 'sharpened' at 80 deg. and set at one shaving's thickness from the blade edge. A bit tricky if your best smoother's blade has a slight curve...It also implies that the standard chipbreaker settings of 1/64" to 1/16" would have no beneficial effect on surface finish whatever. Perhaps this is the reason low angle plane users don't seem to miss a chipbreaker when working on difficult grain?
Best Christmas wishes to all.
* stiffness increases as the cube of thickness - however in this example the 8x thicker blade has an 8x longer bevel so the increased resistance to cutting load is only 8x8=64 times. Incidentally, tapped out Japanese blades are supposed to show an improvement. Mythology? or local stiffening caused by pre stressing the bevel?
** put 10mm of a steel rule at right angles, over the edge of the bench, and prod the end, whilst pretending to be the lever cap with finger tips at 15mm and 100mm
***a vibrating blade produces a surface ripple
Like others posting here, mouths were widened and cap irons adapted, so they could still engage the adjuster when fitted with a thicker blade. Thick 'laminated' blades were made from a Samurai replacement blade, bonded to the detempered original with Locktite. The result was interesting enough to justify purchase of 5mm Hock and Lie Neilsen blades when these became available.
I beleive this to be important, for cutting loads the tip of the blade. This force can be resolved into two parts - one along the blade, pushing it against the adjuster, and the other at right angles, pushing the blade down into the work. This results in a tendency for the blade to pivot on the heel of the bevel, the edge digging in, and the body of the blade lifting from the frog**. This may be clearly demonstrated on a standard blade, by planing with a clock gauge on the blade itself, 50 mm or so up from the heel.
Matters are made worse by the standard 'bent metal' cap iron. Screwing this to a flat blade will bend the blade into a curve. This is not removed when the pair are fitted to the frog and clamped by the lever cap. The blade itself contacts the frog only close to the heel and under the lever of the lever cap. A chatter*** tool.....The two piece cap iron now made by Clifton is designed to prevent this, and also to provide a third clamping point.
The LN chipbreaker is well made, but still similar in principle to the bent metal original. No doubt that screwing the LN to a flat blade will cause the blade to bend (albeit less than the original). However the LN chipbreaker looks similar to that of an infill plane. Infill planes appear to have a much shorter lever cap (with a screw) which seems to clamp down, well up from the cutting edge, at the point where the Bailey blade is most lifted from the frog. When the infill plane's screw is tightened down for work, it may bring cap iron, blade, and frog all into intimate contact, to make a rigid whole. Could the infill experts comment on this guess, please?
A recent post referred to the work of Prof. Kato on the effect of chipbreakers on surface finish, which contains some photos which augment those in Leonard Lee's sharpening book. Kato's paper implies that the cap iron, or chipbreaker, should be 'sharpened' at 80 deg. and set at one shaving's thickness from the blade edge. A bit tricky if your best smoother's blade has a slight curve...It also implies that the standard chipbreaker settings of 1/64" to 1/16" would have no beneficial effect on surface finish whatever. Perhaps this is the reason low angle plane users don't seem to miss a chipbreaker when working on difficult grain?
Best Christmas wishes to all.
* stiffness increases as the cube of thickness - however in this example the 8x thicker blade has an 8x longer bevel so the increased resistance to cutting load is only 8x8=64 times. Incidentally, tapped out Japanese blades are supposed to show an improvement. Mythology? or local stiffening caused by pre stressing the bevel?
** put 10mm of a steel rule at right angles, over the edge of the bench, and prod the end, whilst pretending to be the lever cap with finger tips at 15mm and 100mm
***a vibrating blade produces a surface ripple