That was literally what I stated in the original post that started this. I actually test what I said rather than saying "I don't think". I've seen is a better answer. I can give you something you can test yourself and prove, a better idea.
Apparently when I said you'd be further along to slide the primary bevel down shallower and steepen the tip where damage occurs, it'll:
* last longer
* be easier to nail
* be faster
* eliminate the need for any fast grinding stones
That was just too simple and called rabbit hole. Since then, "I think" is more important than. "I've showed, and you can prove to yourself"
What to see what the difference is chopping slivers of hard maple (like you'd do in half blinds or dovetails) 30 degrees vs. more?
What angle matches the picture to the right? 34. It's not in this picture as it can only get so wide, but 34 stops even the small chipping. 34 is also sharper than 30 within a few strikes due to the lack of damage. Literally takes 10-15 percent fewer strikes to get 32 degrees through an inch of maple than 30, so what do you gain with 30? Nothing.
How many chisels did this differ for? zero, except robert sorby's softest offerings still get a little damage at 34.
No chisel holds up at 30. After an inch of maple (a couple of half blind sockets), you're looking to resharpen.
If you add a few degrees or buff the tip, you'll finish the half blinds (all of them) before you need to sharpen.
Proof is a bridge too far for some, I do realize that. Especially if it's easier to do the method than it is to do another method - it's just too many things better and irrational responses are the only option left.