Following on from my homemade router table post;
my-first-router-table-t108628.html
I wanted to see if I could come up with a jointer style setup that was also super simple and easy to use. Because of the design of my fence I was able to simple turn the fence end for end and use the reverse side as the jointer fence. It was trued up by hand at the bench and the area for the cutter was nibbled away in a few passes. I then used a strip of worktop edging that was in my scrap bin as my offset on the outfeed side. Not only was it a nice thickness of 0.5mm, it is also smooth and flat. It was glued onto the outfeed side and the edges were rounded to stop it catching anywhere.
The cutter is a cheap chinese 10mm x 75mm bit which I trimmed down with an angle grinder as it was too long for my needs and the thought of spinning it up was terrifying.
There is a theoretical material capacity of 45mm though I highly doubt I would ever do that and I am not sure it would handle it anyway but the test cut on a piece of 20mm stock went very well and it is shown in the pictures. It's very easy to setup just using a straight edge, takes seconds and the small depth of cut of only 0.5mm means it doesn't seem to stress or even slow down the katsu at all in use.
Dust extraction near perfect as well.
my-first-router-table-t108628.html
I wanted to see if I could come up with a jointer style setup that was also super simple and easy to use. Because of the design of my fence I was able to simple turn the fence end for end and use the reverse side as the jointer fence. It was trued up by hand at the bench and the area for the cutter was nibbled away in a few passes. I then used a strip of worktop edging that was in my scrap bin as my offset on the outfeed side. Not only was it a nice thickness of 0.5mm, it is also smooth and flat. It was glued onto the outfeed side and the edges were rounded to stop it catching anywhere.
The cutter is a cheap chinese 10mm x 75mm bit which I trimmed down with an angle grinder as it was too long for my needs and the thought of spinning it up was terrifying.
There is a theoretical material capacity of 45mm though I highly doubt I would ever do that and I am not sure it would handle it anyway but the test cut on a piece of 20mm stock went very well and it is shown in the pictures. It's very easy to setup just using a straight edge, takes seconds and the small depth of cut of only 0.5mm means it doesn't seem to stress or even slow down the katsu at all in use.
Dust extraction near perfect as well.