A semi-disk specimen containing an angled edge crack has been used in the past for conducting fracture tests on a brittle rock named Johnstone [Fracture testing of a soft rock with semi-circular specimens under three-point bending. Part 2—mixed mode. Int J Rock Mech Min Sci Geomech Abstr 1994b;31(3):199–212]. The test specimen is appropriate for investigating brittle fracture when the rock samples are subjected to the combined effects of tension and shear along the crack line. However, the experimental results reported in Lim, Johnston, Choi, Boland [Fracture testing of a soft rock with semi-circular specimens under three-point bending. Part 2—mixed mode. Int J Rock Mech Min Sci Geomech Abstr 1994b;31(3):199–212.] are inconsistent with all of the well-known theoretical criteria available for predicting mixed mode brittle fracture. In this paper, a modified criterion is used to provide accurate predictions for the reported experimental results. The modified criterion makes use of a three-parameter model (based on K I , K II and T) for describing the crack tip stresses. It is shown that the non-singular stress term T has a significant role when the rock fracture tests are conducted on the semi-disk specimens.