What Tracy said is very important. After you successfully remove a good flake, because there is a "bulb of percussion" scar on your biface, there will often be a slight concavity there on that flake scar. If you strike there again, you will get a hinge. If you hit there again, you will start stacking up hinges.
The answer is to look at your biface each time you remove a flake (it doesn't take a second) and note whether or not there is a slight dip (concavity) or not. If there is, you need to dress the edge back by lightly hitting it straight down until you achieve a convex shape. In short, if the place you strike is not lens shaped (convex) your flake will stop and break off - a hinge. Hinges are caused when a flake has to dive deeper than the force and mass allow.
In all cases, you have to prepare the edge correctly, as many have said. Lots of time, grinding alone will accomplish creating a lens shape. Other times, you will need to dress it with light percussion taps and then abrade. If you abrade in line with the edge, try abrading perpendicular to the edge - more or less brush the edge with your grinder to remove enough small flakes to bring it into a lens shape.
There are other causes, but this is the major one. If this won't help - post again with more details about what is happening.