Pete, the risk people seem to talk about is that the front part of the blade catches in the workpiece, sending it flying through the air and possibly pulling the operator towards the now-exposed blade. Is that not a concern in this situation?
If you make your jig, not just for this but any jig, for a machine properly your hands will not be anywhere near the blade and you will have full control over the work so nothing can catch. I'll attach a couple pictures of a quick cardboard sketch of what I am suggesting. If you do not have a fence that goes from front to back on the saw for the jig to ride over ...
Thanks!Impressive and interesting. It would look great in any setting.
Not everyone's cup of tea but appealing to me as art and as a showcase for your skills.
Thanks for taking the time to explain Pete, I'd love to be able to use the table saw this way. Ià even have a dado blade that I bought and never used. Current jig is in photo below, doesn't have tunnel for blade, just assumes that it will ride against fence.
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