mhch said:Qwas,
You can start a business, making and selling those new MFT meant fences
call them MFT fence/3 ... ;D
mhch said:One limitation though: holes are at fixed locations. No problem with
installing rail and fence at an accurate 90 angle, but setting another
fence at a fixed right or left distance from the blade for accurate cuts
can't be done unless using an extra rectangular jig (an MFS to stay
green).
mhch said:It turns out that cheap and easy to use dogs can be made from 20mm
diameter PVC pipes, as used in France to run electrical wires along
walls in a basement. I just cut a number of 50mm sections from a spare
pipe I had and they serve the job perfectly. Simply push them in the holes
and they stay in there by friction, without risking to damage the MDF.
Qwas said:Great idea!
Personally, I'm not interested. I have enough ideas for bench dogs to last a lifetime.
Yesterday I received more aluminum extrusions to make a fence out of. My original idea was to use these with the grooves I cut into the table top. But now I'm thinking I might attach some bench dogs to the bottom and use them with the holes.
More things to ponder...
nickao said:
nickao said:Qwas said:Great idea!
Personally, I'm not interested. I have enough ideas for bench dogs to last a lifetime.
Yesterday I received more aluminum extrusions to make a fence out of. My original idea was to use these with the grooves I cut into the table top. But now I'm thinking I might attach some bench dogs to the bottom and use them with the holes.
More things to ponder...
Here is another idea won't they work?
M6 x 20 mm Dowels
Ned Young said:Steve, this is a great idea and a great thread.
One more reason why you shouldn't put a router table insert in the middle of your MFT. :'(
Ned
Qwas said:Slopes
Here is another idea, mainly for American framers but useful information for all.
The table top is a grid of 12 holes horizontally and 9 holes vertically. Framers and roofers generally refer to a (roof) slope in inches of rise per foot across. Let's pick on example of 3 inches per foot. You can easily duplicate that slope or angle on the table. Slip a bench dog in the top right corner hole, come down 3 holes and then all the way to the left. Slip a bench dog in this hole, put a long straight edge between the dogs and align you board for cutting. Clamp the board down and remove the straight edge. Make your cut.
I don't know if those on the metric system refer to slopes in the same way or not, but you can do the same by coming across 10 holes instead of 12.
Qwas said:Is this setup something I missed when beginning, or did everyone else miss this too?
John Stevens said:Qwas said:Is this setup something I missed when beginning, or did everyone else miss this too?
Well, I aligned my guide rail with the holes, but I never thought about the parallellogram! That's sweet. Thanks for the idea. Can't wait to see what else you come up with. Please hurry, because I'm almost finished my latest version of a jumbo MFT, and revisions will only get more labor-intensive as I get closer to completion. ;D
Regards,
John