How are other users getting on with the Festool Router Table when used with the sliding table?
I'm struggling when using it for cutting tenons. Consequently I'm tending to either use the sliding table without the router table fence (making cut settings using the flip stop on the sliding table fence), or I'll use the router table fence on it's own backing up the workpiece with a 90 degree off-cut and sliding that along the router table fence. Either method works, but neither is optimum. Without the router table fence there's no hold down, and with the router table fence holding the workpiece to the push block sometimes introduces errors.
The main problem is that I can't really get enough accuracy when adjusting the router table fence using the engraved lines on the table.
When I'm setting up a spindle moulder with a sliding table, the main datum is the axis of travel of the sliding table. The sliding table fence is set square to that datum, and the spindle moulder fence is set in line with that datum. The spindle moulder fence can then be dialled in or out but stays absolutely parallel. The Festool router table fence doesn't have this facility, so when using the sliding table and the router table fence together I'm not getting perfectly square shoulders on a tenon, they're only out by a hair, but I wonder if any user has found a way to get them dead on?
Thanks
I'm struggling when using it for cutting tenons. Consequently I'm tending to either use the sliding table without the router table fence (making cut settings using the flip stop on the sliding table fence), or I'll use the router table fence on it's own backing up the workpiece with a 90 degree off-cut and sliding that along the router table fence. Either method works, but neither is optimum. Without the router table fence there's no hold down, and with the router table fence holding the workpiece to the push block sometimes introduces errors.
The main problem is that I can't really get enough accuracy when adjusting the router table fence using the engraved lines on the table.
When I'm setting up a spindle moulder with a sliding table, the main datum is the axis of travel of the sliding table. The sliding table fence is set square to that datum, and the spindle moulder fence is set in line with that datum. The spindle moulder fence can then be dialled in or out but stays absolutely parallel. The Festool router table fence doesn't have this facility, so when using the sliding table and the router table fence together I'm not getting perfectly square shoulders on a tenon, they're only out by a hair, but I wonder if any user has found a way to get them dead on?
Thanks