Daviddubya said:
fshanno - I think you and Forrest are talking about two different OF1400 router accessories. The Guide Stop (492601) attaches the OF1400 to the guide rails. The Edge Guide (462636) is used in freehand routing. I looked at these two accessories in my shop, and the diameter of the threaded rod is different, larger on the Edge Guide than on the Guide Stop. So it would not be surprising if the Guide Stop had a slightly different movement for one turn of the knob, since the threads would not be the same.
Thanks for that David.
fshanno - could you clarify which attachment you are using to cut your dados? David's suggestion that you are using the Guide Rail Attachment/Guide Stop...
...seems more likely than the edge guide/parallel side fence:
However, even if you are using the Guide Rail Attachment, the micro-adjust is still 0.1mm per mark, and 1mm per revolution, as mentioned on page 19 of the same excellent manual I referred to previously:
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With the inner guide block clamping knob tight and the
outer guide block clamping knob loose, adjust the microadjust
thumbwheel to set the final position of the router:
► Each number on the wheel represents 0.1mm, and a full
turn of the wheel represents 1.0 mm.
► After the micro-adjustment is complete, tighten the
outer guide block clamping knob.
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You may want to compare your adjustment procedure to the manual.
If you can check the thread pitch of the threaded rod that is used for the micro-adjustment, then you will be able to determine how far one revolution of the wheel will advance the router. For the wheel to advance 1mm per revolution, the pitch needs to be 1mm, so there should be 10 threads per 10mm, or 20 threads per 20mm etc.
Might you be experiencing backlash in the adjustment mechanism?
I'm afraid that I don't have the OF1400 (yet!), so sadly I can't give you real-world advice from using this router and its attachments.
Forrest