It's always fun to watch Brian Sedgeley do a demonstration. It's entertaining enough that I still watched all 3 videos back-to-back just for fun, even though I already know the capabilities of the CMS system.
I do have one minor tip for anyone doing raised panels though. As Brian pointed out, you should always do end-grain before long-grain on your profile cuts to reduce the effects of tearout. However, Brian made it a point to do both end-grain cuts before doing either long-grain cut.
You really only need to make one end-grain cut first, and then as long as you rotate the vertical workpiece clockwise, you won’t have tearout on the second end-grain cut. It is a smoother movement of the workpiece when you are just rotating it 90 degrees between each pass, versus 180 degrees, then 90, then 180.
One point of clarification to what I just said though. When you are doing vertical panels, like what Brian showed, it is a clockwise rotation of the workpiece as viewed from the front. If you are using a horizontal panel raising bit, then it is a counterclockwise rotation as viewed from above. (The principle is the same, it is just the words necessary to describe the rotation that are different.)
In simpler terms, your previous corner that already has some profile cut, is the end of the cut that should enter the cutter first. The trailing end of the cut is the one that is still uncut.