bugbear":37i3fh85 said:
Both a close-enough cap-iron and the high enough effective pitch
will reduced tearout. Are the mechanisms (in fact) the same,
or do they work in different ways to achieve the same result?
On the face of things, it seems "quite reasonable" that adding a cap iron with a 20 degree
bevel to a plane iron at 45 might behave very similarly to a single iron bedded at 65 degree.
I am aware that most of the "cap iron conversation" took place on US and AUS
forums, so the answer to this might be well known, so any links
to previous discussions would be just as good as laboriously typed out answers,
BugBear
It's a fair question, but the evidence from this thread (at least, so far) suggests the answer is that the mechanisms are not fully or completely understood.
That would explain why the subject gives rise to so much comment. There is accumulated experience, there are some who have done a lot of planing, there are some who have tried a great variety of planes (those two are not necessarily the same group of people), there are some with insights to offer, and some with strong opinions (in some cases bordering on repeated messianic tub-thumping), and there is some interesting, but not wholly conclusive video evidence. However, nobody (so far) has pointed to a comprehensive study along scientific lines that illuminates the mechanisms at work.
That probably explains WHY there's so much debate. Nobody really KNOWS. A few people THINK they know, but nobody can provide a full and conclusive answer backed by research and evidence. Thus, debate continues - and that's a perfectly human consequence, of course!