Happened across this:
https://tinyurl.com/bzn8aph3
https://tinyurl.com/bzn8aph3
squall_line said:Technically, that's not a wrong way to use it...? It is a mortiser, after all.
Well, they're not so "clean". If you look at the cheeks in the last few seconds of the video, you can see the ripples of the overlapping nature of this kind of cut. Functionally, as a bridle joint, I'm sure they are fine, but if the joint is exposed, that will show.RobS888 said:Nice clean cuts, no dust, pretty cool.
Packard said:I would normally do that on my tenon jig in the table saw using a dado head. But I am limited by the ceiling height. I can to a height of 7' minus the height of the table saw and the jig. Sometimes the parts are too long for that.
I think I could make my router do those slots by creating a shelf on the edge. But it would not be ideal. I think a shaper could swing a large enough cutter to make that cut.
I don't have a domino. I probably would have made these cuts on the table saw.
Packard said:Still thinking about this. I think I would mount my router at 90 degrees and cut the slots that way.
This is approximately how I would do it, but building the mount would take longer than using the domino (which I do not have).