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Deleted member 174758
Tried a squaring piece? Glue a strip of sandpaper onto the edge which is pushing the material. Helps you to grip it and helps stop it moving as you cut - just stop a but shy of the cutter.managed to have a play today With some ogee edging on few shelves, worked great. Found the end cut a little tricky as quite large gap in between bit on fence, narrow stock wants to move off line towards bit.
The other trick is a false fence (what the Yanks call a zero clearance fence). Set your entire fence forward of the cutter. Fix a piece of sacrificial material (say 6mm MDF/plywood) onto the front of the fence, full height, full length. Turn the router on. Unlock the fence, and from the front and with your hands well away from the cutter push the cutter onto the fence so that it plunges (slowly) through. Your T&G set has a nut and bearings so it won't go all the way through. For cutter sets like that you have to switch off, pull the fence forwards again , remove the fence from the router table completely then cut-out the waste to clear the bearing and the nut (jigsaw, padsaw, etc) before refitting and replunging to the required depth. Standard practice on spindle moulders