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Routing the Plate Opening: A good way to get a parallel and square opening is to use the saw fence as a guide for two of the cuts. Measure the offset from the edge of the router base to the side of the spiral bit and use this in setting the fence for each cut, parallel to the fence. Clamp a square piece of wood in place as a guide for the sides of the opening, perpendicular to the saw fence. Next form the rabbet that holds the insert in place by using the same procedure and bit you used to cut the opening
Routing Slots in the Fence: Clamp a stop to the saw fence to stop the assembly at the end of its cut. Drill a 1/4" hole at the beginning of the cut and with the router running, lean the fence assembly against the stop, touching the table and lever it down over the hole that you just drilled. Gently push the assembly to the end of its cut and lever-lift the assembly off the table.
Jointer Insert: For edge jointing, cut a piece of laminate to the size of one fence face. Make it a little tall so you can pull it out from between the fence face and the fence. Cut two slots to clear the bolts on the fence. Chuck a straight bit in the router and set it flush with the offset fence face and you've made an edge jointer. Pull the spacer out to resume normal operation.
Finger Boards: Cut a 30-degree angle on the end of the board. Cut two parallel, 1/4" slots in the board as shown in the photo. Mark a line 21/2" from the end of the miter cut. Cut out the 5/8" notches in the sides and then cut out 1/8" fingers with a 1/8" spacing, ripping to the 2-1/2" pencil mark. Stop and back the board out of the cut. Router Fence for a Table Saw
February 02, 2007
by Jim Stuard Your table saw is a router table and jointer just waiting to happen. Replace one of the saw's wings (or adapt your existing table board) to hold a router table insert, and you're in business. Add this router fence to your table saw's fence and you get a router fence with the capacity to handle boards few commercial router tables could even touch. Make a couple quick adjustments to the fence and you can edge-joint boards for gluing up panels -- no jointer necessary. This fence was designed for the Little Shop Mark II, a rolling workshop that was featured in the September 1999 issue (#110). However, this fence will work with just about any contractor- or cabinet-style table saw. This fence is essentially two long plywood boxes with hardwood face fronts on them. The space between the boxes is where the router bit spins. One of the boxes stores router bits, the other acts as a dust collection chute. Though construction isn't complex, study the diagrams carefully before you begin. It's in the Hole Making the Fence Now drill the holes in the back piece to accept the 1/4" x 20 t-nuts that attach the router fence to the saw fence. Make it Adjustable Tiny but Tough Fingers Click here for PDF file. Jim Stuard is a former associate editor for Popular Woodworking. |
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