I personally wouldn't be too happy with a wedge that went any less than 2/3 of the way into the eye, but if it felt good and solid I'd probably live with it for a while.
From the sound of it the wedge is ready to be driven home, everything sounds like it fits pretty well, but it's hard to be sure without having the thing in my hand.
Sawing the top of the last job after everything's been fitted, that's how it all ends up looking nice and neat.
Cheers,
Stuart.
Thanks again Stuart, and sorry for the late reply. Today I finally had the chance to work on this little project again (damn holidays
). But I'm not really satisfied with the results so far.
I sanded off a little more of the handle (very little, only 1mm or so), to make more room for the wedge. So I added a little wood glue (I know the usefulness of this is debatable, but anyway) and hammered the wedge home. I marked the point on the wedge to where it should end up if I could hammer it 2/3th of the way down.
Well, to make a long story short, after trying and trying, with different hammers and techniques, I'm unable to insert the wedge little over 1/3th of the way down into the eye. I really thought there was enough room, and I really did try.
It feels solid though, (and I'll likely saw the top off, sand it down a little and add a metal wedge so the wooden wedge doesn't work itself upwards) but I really don't want to end up with a dangerous tool. I can probably work the wedge out with a chisel, without damaging the handle, but I'm not sure if that's the way to go. I could also leave the top of the handle sticking out of the eye 1,5cm or so, so the wedge is actually longer.
What would be the dangers if I were to use the axe like this? It's hard to imagine the head flying off mid-swing, but still...
Any advice and axe-wisdom would be greatly appreciated!
Regarding dimensions: the head is about 79mm tall and the wedge is 26mm inserted into the head (not measuring the part that's sticking out the top, obviously).
Here are some photos (the wedge looks thinner on the photo than it actually is, by the way).