Daniel,
Thanks for your reply. Although many of the specifics you discussed don't apply directly to my neck joint, it's still helpful to think through the stresses and ways of engineering the joint, and your knowledge and input is appreciated.
This will be my first attempt to upload a photo since the forum was revamped. If this shows up, this is a photo of an ice cream cone heel on a Lacote guitar.
My concern is the potential for the heel to simply snap right off the shaft, especially considering the stress it will be under with my adjustable neck joint. I'm afraid I don't have any pictures of my joint to post right now. The fretboard tongue is elevated off the soundboard, supported by an extension of the neck shaft (which also doesn't touch the soundboard). There is no tenon on the heel; the neck block is mortised for the whole heel to seat down into it. This gives the heel significantly more meat, and there is also a dowel in it. Still, way the whole thing is put together sure wants to snap the heel right off; I'm not sure how much of a stress riser is added by the sharp transition from shaft to heel of the ice cream cone shape... how much of a concern I should have about the possibility of breakage...
I know Martin built at least one guitar in a very Staufferish style (sometime in the late 19th or early 20th century, I can't recall) with a neck joint very much like I'm describing and an ice cream cone heel. I have pics of it in a book, but nothing I can attach here.