Thanks David for taking the time to reply at length..it’s appreciated and very helpful.
Its an interesting one alright.
I admit that I’ve never come across this particular method before but the idea of that very tiny convex bevel I don’t think is new .
There’s another well known guy who though he doesn’t use the buffing wheel to put on the tiny convex bevel nonetheless hones so that he makes the same tiny convex right on the edge of his chisel or plane blades.
I don’t know anything about his angles but I would imagine that he gets similar results if the outcome is the same convex right on the edge.
Anyway, I’m going to give your method a go as I’ve nothing to lose and I will let you know the outcome.
Like Graham said, there are a variety of ways to skin a cat ... Am I allowed to say that ?
Apologies to all Cat owners on here lest I’m reported to the Feline Police.
To quote a pro wrestler I heard once when someone asked him about his gimmick. "I think I stole it from someone else, I don't know who, but nobody comes up with anything original". I haven't seen the geometric bits specified anywhere , but it makes this easier without anything getting sloppy. It's less work rather than more.
At the very least, carving tools are often buffed - is the geometry control this tight? I don't know, for some setups it probably is. Knives are cut to a thin bevel and then buffed on the tip.
it's not new. What I wanted to figure out was to make a way that it was better than the flat microbevel, else.....just do the flat microbevel, right?
To game getting a sense of the difference (if you're going to go all the way to buffing the tip), find a chisel that you consider marginal.
The microbevel came up as a matter of cross reference because the immediate assertion was "well, if you round the tip, a tiny microbevel would be better. "
It can be close.
This method in general is how I sharpened before, but doing the rounding by hand. The buffer just does it better than you can do by hand and completely eliminates the need for a fine stone, but the sharpness is at least as good (or better) than a fine stone.