Hi Mark,
I use molding planes as well and have experienced sections of wood that caused the planes to chatter. I resolved most problems. Correct sharpening was one solution and your method is almost exactly what I adopted with respect to angles. I like low-angle planes. I also prevent chatter by making sure the stock blank is secured so that it cannot flex while I am planing. I anchor my stock blanks using my leg vises with the side of the blank tucked up against the edge of my bench and further secured with holdfasts. That set up is rigid. It is also only 34" high, which allows me to get over the stock and place a lot of pressure downward on the plane with the weight of my body rather than arm strength alone. That took care of 99% of chatter problems. However, on the Reading gun I just posted, there was one spot in the barrel channel that tore, chipped, and chattered regardless of what I did. I solved that by carving out the area with chisels and scrapers to the final depth and then used the plane for the rest of the channel. My plane simply glided over the problem section until the rest of the channel was down to the finished depth. One other possible solution for you is a high-angle blade (70 degrees or more) that is more like a scraping plane. That will strongly support the edge and may solve chatter by scraping off small shavings. However, most of my chatter problems came from the stock flexing as I planed.
dave