How clamp down long piece of wood to allow routing along its length?

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Helixfarm

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Hi all

Probably dumb question, but wanted to know how best to clamp wood to trestle table to allow me to run a hand held plunge router down its length. It is a 2.1m long piece of oak that will be a stile of a door and I need to cut a groove along its length so that I can insert the tongue of a T+G board into it. I went out and bought a track and guide for the router, but realised that I can only use that if the work piece is flat with the edge of the table. I am now thinking about buying a Zyliss Profi-King on EBay and clamping both stiles onto the long planks which form the table I am working on. I should then be able to balance the router on top of the two stiles and using a side guide, run the router the length of the wood. No doubt there is an easier way that I am not thinking about, so any advice would be very welcome. Thanks.
 
Two tips to consider.
One is to use two lengths of the timber to give a wider surface for the router to sit on stably.
The second, and I can't promote this idea strongly enough, is to buy a set of long fence rods and a second side fence for your router. With the stock trapped between two fences adjusted to be a snug sliding fit, you can rout edge rebates or groove any face without the risk of a wobble ruining the cut.
 
just clamp the 2 stiles together

if thats not enough then clamp some thicknesses of mdf or plywood to the door stile

sometimes screwing a length of timber across the router fence to make it one helps

the other thing is to have the stiles overlength and thus avoiding the router doing a wiggle as it gets to the end of the cut
 
Flip the whole thing upside down.

Use a stout piece of MDF and screw the router to it, plunge through the board and out to the required depth.
Turn the board over and clamp it to your trestles. Clamp on a suitable piece of 3x2 as a fence (measure carefully a few times, been there already)
Rout your oak carefully and steadily. Some DIY fingerboards can help keep things steady if needed
 
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