Hi there.
I'm new to Festooland, but very enthusiastic. There's a bit of a, I don't know what I don't know issue.
I've seen all the references to homemade parallel guides, and they seem great.
But is this strictly for folks who have the saw and a guide, rather than an MFT3?
The issue I'm trying to solve is the repeated, uniform cut. Or the repeated, uniform dado with a router on the guiderail.
I purchased some Quas dogs and rail dogs, which are slick, because I have more confidence in them than I do in the fence on the MFT3, which seems subject to getting banged out of alignment.
Does everyone just use the fence with that little flag stop for this purpose?
In my dreams, I think I am looking for a set of rail dogs that secure an adjustable fence (that moves laterally with one knob, yet stays parallel) so that I can run the work piece against it securely, and easily adjust the fence. [Note: this fence would be parallel to the guide, not perpendicular.]
Again, ability to adjust easily would be key. So it's like a table saw.
Appreciate the thoughts.
Tom
I'm new to Festooland, but very enthusiastic. There's a bit of a, I don't know what I don't know issue.
I've seen all the references to homemade parallel guides, and they seem great.
But is this strictly for folks who have the saw and a guide, rather than an MFT3?
The issue I'm trying to solve is the repeated, uniform cut. Or the repeated, uniform dado with a router on the guiderail.
I purchased some Quas dogs and rail dogs, which are slick, because I have more confidence in them than I do in the fence on the MFT3, which seems subject to getting banged out of alignment.
Does everyone just use the fence with that little flag stop for this purpose?
In my dreams, I think I am looking for a set of rail dogs that secure an adjustable fence (that moves laterally with one knob, yet stays parallel) so that I can run the work piece against it securely, and easily adjust the fence. [Note: this fence would be parallel to the guide, not perpendicular.]
Again, ability to adjust easily would be key. So it's like a table saw.
Appreciate the thoughts.
Tom