
6.Square up a second infeed fence board to the same dimensions as the one you removed in Step 5, then face plane off 1⁄16". The amount of material removed will determine the depth of cut.
Removing more than 1⁄16" from the infeed fence may greatly increase the risk of kick- back injury when routing.
7.Redrill and countersink holes in the new infeed fence board, then secure it with the fasteners removed in Step 5.
8.Place a straightedge against the outfeed fence board, then adjust the fence assembly so that the straightedge is also against the bit flute, as illustrated in Figure 30.
HigV^\]i | IdeK^Zl |
| |
|
| ||
GdjiZg7^i |
|
| |
Dji[ZZY | HigV^\]iZY\Z | >c[ZZY | |
;ZcXZ7dVgY |
|
| ;ZcXZ7dVgY |
Figure 30. Fence jointer setup (guard removed
for clarity.
9.Lock the fence assembly in place, adjust the router guard as needed and secure it, con- nect the router to power, then perform the cut (see Figure 31).
IdeK^Zl |
8jii^c\9^gZXi^dc |
Figure 31. Edge jointing (guard removed for
clarity).
Always feed the workpiece against the rout- er bit rotation direction, as illustrated below. Otherwise, the workpiece could be aggres- sively pulled from your hands, drawing them into the spinning cutter.
7^i |
|
GdiVi^dc | Ldg`e^ZXZ |
Model H7507 (Mfg. since 3/05) |