It's because the back of the cutter is back cutting, if you position a sacrificial board in front of the cut it should stop the breakout. It may also be worth taking a relief cut first.
Yes, but as said by by clogs, make sure everything is held and use sharp cutters.So I need a piece infront and behind?
What router profile, are you doing a single cut or several passes as I have never had this problem and want to know more, plus I use a lot of Wealdons cutters.
Sorry if this sounds patronising but you are feeding from the right going left? If so try shallower cuts and you should never cut more than the diameter of the cutter.
...and then I looked at your pics and clearly you are!
I'm using the backer piece to hold it square. It's not moving as the groove is fine. The only issue is the bad entry tearout.looking g at the size of the hole around your cutter and the width of the wood I'd think about it moving on entry? can you fit a plate or try clamping the piece to your mitre gauge? I'd also consider making a simple sled with a toggle clamp to hold the piece solid.
does it do it on scrap softwood (same width)?
I am suggesting the bit is blunt, causing a jolt as it makes contact with the timber. Also if you are feeding it too fast it can do this.
Spiral cutters are good as they reduce this sort of thing.
Ollie
I use the Woodpeckers coping sled, but the first sled in the YouTube link you provided looks good. My only comment about the YouTube version is the inability to adjust the polycarbonate shield that rides along the fence. This is a minor issue, and would not stop me from building the sled if I didn't want to buy one.
Enter your email address to join: