Broad hatchets are one of the most fun woodworking tools.
Scary as hell, but fantastically effective and really fun.
When you have carved and set a good comfortable secure handle? And ground that long single bevel? Then stoned and stropped one of these?
And then you pick it up and head toward a piece of wood?
You are striding to the plate with 2 men down in the bottom of the 9th, and one run behind. You absolutely and positively know, with every cell of your being, how wicked and dangerous this situation is.
You got 2+ pounds of steel and 14" of leverage behind a 5-6" long razors edge. This tool is going to cut, and cut whatever it meets. And cut deep.
But when you begin to work. Oh when you work...........
Old Swedish saying "If you can't make it with an ax, you can't make it"
The ax is not just a single edge. I mean it is, but it doesn't act that way in use.
The base of the blade edge has fantastic penetration qualities. You can use the bottom and you just can't believe how deep it can bite into wood. All the leverage and mass comes into play at the bottom of the edge. It's not as controllable, but shockingly wicked deep cuts.
The middle of the edge is your general purpose, working a little slower and cleaner part. You can shape in 3 dimensions.
And the top of the edge? Is your finishing tool.
You can get up at the top of the blade and dance across the work, taking thin controllable shavings like you just can't imagine until you have been knee deep in chips and still working steady.
The columns you see here, were carved with a fairly large side hatchet. Everything else in the carpenters arsenal was tried, but nothing came close to a razor sharp ax.
yours Scott