OK, I am a razor sharp drawknife guy, sharp has never failed me until today. I was working some slightly green osage billets down to one grain today. They were the really bad roller coaster type, wood hard as a rock just like I like it with plenty of snake thrown in as well. My sharp drawknife would catch a peak and splinter off the wood no matter how hard I tried to carefully slice it off, same on the few level spots. I used my old faithful huge debarking drawknife and a thinner Greenlee, both very sharp with the same results. Next I grabbed my thinner blade Pine Knot drawknife and dulled it back to the level I once used before I learned how to work wonders with my sharp drawknife.
The wood was so hard and the early wood so thin that the dull drawknife couldn't make much progress.
I thought " I need to tune this drawknife for this particular wood" and sharpened the edge a couple of stokes with my diamond hone. The new edge was slightly better but still not what I needed. Sharpen a few strokes and test, sharpen a few strokes and test, about the 4th sharpening session BINGO, just exactly the edge this wood needed to behave. Chasing a grain on the rest of the billet was a piece of cake.
This tip may be common knowledge but this is the first time I tried it. I have worked down at least 300 osage staves so far so I am not exactly a beginner.