Update:
Tried the S 75/4 FSG blade on a slightly smaller circle (37cm) on the same piece of board with a lot better results. This blade actually cut mainly square (it's about 1.5x the thickness of the S 75/2.5) and kept with the curve fairly well. My only gripe with this blade is that the cut quality isn't anywhere near "finish ready" with lots of splintering going on so once I get a replacement board I guess I'll have to use this setup for a rough cut at about 39cm and then rig my router to come in for the last 10mm and hope that it'll be enough safety zone to avoid splinters. Or should I try to tape the edge with blue tape just in case?
I guess it's off to the plywood store to get some router base jig material and figure out how I can attach a jig like this trammel thing onto my OF1400 base... And check that I have a long enough straight router bit to trim the 28mm edge in one pass (not totally sure about that even thou I do have multiple straight bit otherwise).
On a related note:
What's the point of the other gazillion Festool blades since they are too thin to stay square when in the Carvex so why isn't there a fine finish blade which is meant for cutting tight curves and be thick enough to stay square through the piece at the same time? Has anyone dared to try if the Mafell Cunex blade would fit somehow into the Carvex blade holder? [tongue]
If I read the Festool blade guide pictograms correctly then only the three different lenght S75/105/145/4 FSG blades and the S75/4 FS are for cutting squarely and only the FSG blades and the S 50/1.4 K are meant for cutting tight curves? I can understand the different blade geometries are meant for different materials like metal or plastic, but if the blades wonder to random angles sideways while cutting they are worthless in my opinion. What does the black icon mean in the S 50/1.4 K blade 'specialities' column?