Here's a couple of ideas taken from two articles by Bob Van Dyke in Fine Woodworking magazine, adapted for the Triton workcentre.
The first two pictures show an adaptation of his tablesaw add-on fence, with a tenoning jig built to match his design.
In the third picture I have taken his second idea, the L-fence, and combined it with the main fence. With this you can safely cut straight edges, including tapers, with the cut-off falling off underneath the L-fence. You just need to attach a straight edge to the workpiece, with double-sided tape or a glue gun, and run it against the L-fence.
Tenon fence front.jpgTenon fence rear.jpgL-fence.jpg
The first two pictures show an adaptation of his tablesaw add-on fence, with a tenoning jig built to match his design.
In the third picture I have taken his second idea, the L-fence, and combined it with the main fence. With this you can safely cut straight edges, including tapers, with the cut-off falling off underneath the L-fence. You just need to attach a straight edge to the workpiece, with double-sided tape or a glue gun, and run it against the L-fence.
Tenon fence front.jpgTenon fence rear.jpgL-fence.jpg
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