How do you cut biscuits with a router?
Considering this, can you use a router to trim a door?
A full-size router can tip or wobble when you balance it on a workpiece edge (a door, for example). But a trim router, with its narrow base, light weight, and low center of gravity, makes the job easy. Use a template with a top-bearing dado cleanout bit with a small cutterhead.
- Step 1: Cut the Plywood Into a Circle.
- Step 2: Drill Holes in the Circle.
- Step 3: Screw the Jig Into the Router Base.
- Step 4: Drill Pivot Holes in the Arm of the Jig.
- Step 5: Cut a Circle.
- Step 6: Drill Holes in the Wood Block.
- Step 7: Sand the Dowels.
- Step 8: Apply Wood Glue.
Correspondingly, can you do biscuit joints with a router?
If you want to make biscuit joints, you don't have to buy a biscuit joiner. There are two situations where a router can't substitute for a biscuit joiner: A router can cut slots only along the edges of a board, not across its face; and it can only cut along square edges, not beveled ones.
Biscuit joint is a plunge-cut mortise in both sides of the joint with a "biscuit" inserted to align and provide glue surface area. A purpose built biscuit joiner uses a small circular saw blade plunged into the wood.