A wobble dado blade can only cut a square groove when it is set for no wobble at all (i.e., the dado is the width of the blade). As soon as it has wobble set into it then the outside edge of the cut is no longer perpendicular to the axis of the saw shaft -- it will produce a radiused groove that is more pronounced as the wobble is increased. There is nothing wrong with it -- it cannot do what you want, which is a square groove or dado with a flat bottom. The only advantage I can think of is that it is cheap (but sadly, you get what you pay for). The SD508 dado blade that is currently for sale in the Classified Ads has a pair of outside cutter blades and then a set of chipper blades that stack to fom a "wide" stack of blades of the exact width you want that cut a very clean square-bottomed dado. Stacked dado sets are far superior to wobble dados --- do your self a favor and replace your wobbler with a stacked one. I own a Freud SD508 and it is a precision saw accessory. If you cannot afford one, you can cut square dados with multiple passes of your saw blade with 1/8" offsets per pass (cut the outer edges of the dado first and then the waste part in the middle).