I'm wondering if any of you guys have made a jig for steadying a router when using a flush cut bit. I'm a complete newbie at woodworking and saw an episode of Woodsmith that showed this jig and think it would work for my current problem.
My first read wood project is a set of nesting end tables. The tops are 3/4 cherry plywood with a solid strip on the edges. The plans said to make the edge strips about 1/8" taller than needed and to sand them flush to the table top after they are glued up.
Well I am at the sanding stage and it sure seems like a lot of sanding will be needed to get them flush. I recently saw the Woodsmith TV show and they showed using a router with a flush cut bit to solve this exact problem...the trick being keeping the router level while making the cut. So they made a jig to balance the router while cutting the edge strips.
My problem is that the jig looks a little more complex than building the tables themselves. I have access to a router but have never done a procedure like this....
Not sure if this all makes sense....but that's my dilemma. Any advise?
My first read wood project is a set of nesting end tables. The tops are 3/4 cherry plywood with a solid strip on the edges. The plans said to make the edge strips about 1/8" taller than needed and to sand them flush to the table top after they are glued up.
Well I am at the sanding stage and it sure seems like a lot of sanding will be needed to get them flush. I recently saw the Woodsmith TV show and they showed using a router with a flush cut bit to solve this exact problem...the trick being keeping the router level while making the cut. So they made a jig to balance the router while cutting the edge strips.
My problem is that the jig looks a little more complex than building the tables themselves. I have access to a router but have never done a procedure like this....
Not sure if this all makes sense....but that's my dilemma. Any advise?