Thanks for the replies guys. I am looking for a framing chisel, not slick, for chopping green oak. I have a Barr slick and chisels up to 50mm but want to try something bigger. D_W thanks for being so up front about what it is you do. The abuse the chisel would be getting (60mm width chopping down shoulders over 100mm deep) is something i cannot imagine a non socketed chisel would be capable of taking
Making one that could tolerate the abuse wouldn't be that difficult. I'd just need to know every single thing that makes the chisel good before I'd make one. I don't charge for tools, so I don't have any desire to make one that wouldn't be the one you'd choose just by feel and sort of non-verbal pleasures that you'd get.
That may sound backwards - since I don't charge more than materials, then it has to be as close to perfect as I could make it.
I've seen a lot of explanations for socketed tools over tanged (the japanese timber tools are tanged, and they don't have a particularly robust tang design despite the internet wisdom - I've made the bench chisels fail before when tempering the metal parts and seeing what their limits are - apparently, they are beyond the limit of the handle/tang junction). Maybe the most believable thing for me is that the socket allows you to swap handles when you break one. I've seen two people suggest the socket is good because even when you've lost the handle, you can use the chisel as it's socketed to finish a job, but that's a potentially costly move.
When I make a chisel, it's fully hardened up to the shoulder, and then partially hardened through part of the tang just short of the bolster and then mostly unhardened above that - it'd tolerate anything shy of putting a cheater pipe on the handle - it's the aspects (The profile, the weight, the proportions, etc) that I'm less sure of.
thinking off of the top of my head - the lack of tanged chisels in really large framers may also have something to do with how it dictates handle shape (you can still have a nice taper into the socket. The handle into a tanged chisel with a tang that's around 1/2" square at the bolster would be very strange and straight, and that's not very comfortable)