Wend
Established Member
Hi all,
I've had a router table for a while now, but not got around to doing much with it, so I had a go at doing something with it yesterday. Unfortunately it was without much success, so I ended up using chisels and a hammer instead, but I'd like to understand what I should have done to increase my versatility in the future.
Imagine you have a piece of wood 5 x 5 x 50cm, and you want to cut a groove across the middle of one face of it (in the short direction, so the groove is 5cm long). My table isn't that deep, so there's no way to use the fence for it. I tried just using the mitre gauge, and holding the wood against it, but I think that as it made contact the bit pulled the wood towards the right - which I guess is exactly what you would expect would happen.
So what should I have done instead? I did wonder if I should have clamped the wood to the mitre fence, to stop it moving, but I wasn't sure if that would be wise - in particular, I didn't know what would happen in that scenario if there was kickback.
The only other thing I could imagine is some sort of jig, riding in the mitre slot, and providing a fence off the end of the table. To get something sturdy with only a single mitre slot seems like it would need a lot of engineering, though.
Any advice please?
Thanks!
I've had a router table for a while now, but not got around to doing much with it, so I had a go at doing something with it yesterday. Unfortunately it was without much success, so I ended up using chisels and a hammer instead, but I'd like to understand what I should have done to increase my versatility in the future.
Imagine you have a piece of wood 5 x 5 x 50cm, and you want to cut a groove across the middle of one face of it (in the short direction, so the groove is 5cm long). My table isn't that deep, so there's no way to use the fence for it. I tried just using the mitre gauge, and holding the wood against it, but I think that as it made contact the bit pulled the wood towards the right - which I guess is exactly what you would expect would happen.
So what should I have done instead? I did wonder if I should have clamped the wood to the mitre fence, to stop it moving, but I wasn't sure if that would be wise - in particular, I didn't know what would happen in that scenario if there was kickback.
The only other thing I could imagine is some sort of jig, riding in the mitre slot, and providing a fence off the end of the table. To get something sturdy with only a single mitre slot seems like it would need a lot of engineering, though.
Any advice please?
Thanks!