I'm building a new dining room table and thought that it might be easier to use my Domino 700 for joining the cross members between the legs to the legs instead of cutting traditional mortises in the legs and tenons on the ends of the cross members. But, I'd like the cross members to be perfectly centered where the attach to the legs and this is where I'm having an issue.
With the traditional mortise and tenon method you simply cut your tenon on the end of the cross member and cut your mortise on the center of the leg.
However, when I go to use the Domino to cut the mortises in the end of the cross member I run into a problem because the fence on the domino only adjusts to specific stops. The stops won't allow me to perfectly center the mortise cuts on the end of the cross member. So, to make sure my cross member is centered on my leg I believe I have to either:
1) Do the math to figure out how far off center on the cross member my mortises are cut and then offset the layout line on my leg this distance so I can line my Domino up and create offset mortises that match the offset on my cross members.
2) Create a custom shim for the fence that shifts the Domino so it is perfectly centered in the cross member
Either of these adds a bunch of extra work that is a bit fraught with the possibility for error.
Is there a better way or am I drinking to much green Kool-Aid and should just go back to traditional mortise and tenon joinery for this.
Thanks
With the traditional mortise and tenon method you simply cut your tenon on the end of the cross member and cut your mortise on the center of the leg.
However, when I go to use the Domino to cut the mortises in the end of the cross member I run into a problem because the fence on the domino only adjusts to specific stops. The stops won't allow me to perfectly center the mortise cuts on the end of the cross member. So, to make sure my cross member is centered on my leg I believe I have to either:
1) Do the math to figure out how far off center on the cross member my mortises are cut and then offset the layout line on my leg this distance so I can line my Domino up and create offset mortises that match the offset on my cross members.
2) Create a custom shim for the fence that shifts the Domino so it is perfectly centered in the cross member
Either of these adds a bunch of extra work that is a bit fraught with the possibility for error.
Is there a better way or am I drinking to much green Kool-Aid and should just go back to traditional mortise and tenon joinery for this.

Thanks