Crazyraceguy said:The spacer is because I mark to the centerline....
Thank you! That helps a lot.
Crazyraceguy said:The spacer is because I mark to the centerline....
Crazyraceguy said:Marking the reference side and not worrying about the mortise being centered seems to be "best practice"
jeffinsgf said:Crazyraceguy said:Marking the reference side and not worrying about the mortise being centered seems to be "best practice"
I have actually started purposefully positioning the mortise noticeably off-center. No question about which side is up.
PaulMarcel said:The Domiplate's audience was cabinet shops. Never needed to worry about the fence moving (which was a problem back then) or not being parallel to the cutter centerline (a problem mine has). Plus a cabinet shop leaves it on the Domino. A separate Domino would be used for anything where the Domiplate wasn't attached (or leave the guys to remove it). A lot of shops really liked it for exactly that use. For home shops? Not as necessary.
cpw said:Snip.
The Domiplate is similarly useful for being able to plunge either vertically or horizontally without any reconfiguration of the machine.
Snip.
cpw said:Chuck,
The included bracket doesn't have a handle like the Domiplate; so I don't think you get quite as good a grip to make sure that the machine doesn't tilt.
Snip.
Charles
Richard/RMW said:For casework, Steve Rowe posted a technique years ago that's basically idiot proof. I can attest, even I can't muff it.
https://www.festoolownersgroup.com/...ino-for-casework-joinery/msg292071/#msg292071
RMW