A Tenon Jig for the Ryobi BT3000

Collapse
X
Collapse
  •  

  • A Tenon Jig for the Ryobi BT3000

    Originally Posted by Highland Hardware in the category Traditional Table Saw Jigs - BT3000 Style

    A multi-purpose tenon jig like the one shown here is easy to build and easy to use on the BT3000. The jig is designed to ride on the rip fence, providing the capability for sliding movement accurately parallel to the blade as well as very easy positioning for centered or offset tenons, lap joints and bridle joints. The vertical tenoning fence can be removed and replaced with a right-angle cradle for splining miters, either individual pieces or assembled frames. An H-2 toggle clamp (see the clamp section of our main catalog) secures stock quickly and releases it instantly after cutting.


    A Tenon Jig for the Ryobi BT3000 Tablesaw
    A number of people have recently asked for a copy of the plan we published in our catalog a couple of years ago which showed how to build a simple tenon jig for the Ryobi BT3000 tablesaw. For your convenience, we are repeating it here in our electronic version of Wood News.

    A multi-purpose tenon jig like the one shown here is easy to build and easy to use on the BT3000. The jig is designed to ride on the rip fence, providing the capability for sliding movement accurately parallel to the blade as well as very easy positioning for centered or offset tenons, lap joints and bridle joints. The vertical tenoning fence can be removed and replaced with a right-angle cradle for splining miters, either individual pieces or assembled frames. An H-2 toggle clamp (see the clamp section of our main catalog) secures stock quickly and releases it instantly after cutting.Click image for larger versionName:	ten-jig.jpgViews:	1Size:	42.5 KBID:	833646

    3/4" birch plywood is a good choice of material for the jig and its fences. A triple layer of plywood works well for the bridge piece, providing plenty of surface for strong and rigid attachment to both faces. The width of the bridge must be established very precisely to insure the jig's smooth action with no play or looseness at all. Rip a piece of plywood 40" long and about 1- 5/8" to 1-3/4" wide. Cut it into three 13" pieces and glue them together to form the bridge blank. Joint or rip one edge of the blank straight and square. Now thickness plane or rip the piece to fit snugly between two pieces of stock clamped to your fence faces; the bridge should come out about 1-37/64" wide. The other dimensions shown in the drawing may be varied as needed to suit your work; we've used the jig on 3' and 4' high work with no trouble controlling the stock.

    This jig won't be worth using if it doesn't hold your work very precisely perpendicular to the saw table. Build the jig carefully, and then finish the job on your jointer or on the tablesaw to be certain the high face is perpendicular to the two bottom edges. The tenoning fence must also be mounted (and re-mountable) very carefully to hold your workpiece dead vertical. Be finicky; this part of the job will determine if your next hundred tenons fit right or not. Drill mounting screw holes in the fence (we used 1-1/2" screws to mount the toggle clamp so they also secure the fence), then clamp the fence to the jig and mark where to drill pilot holes in the jig face. Don't attach the fence yet; first you'll use it as a template to mark identical screw holes in the miter cradle.

    The miter cradle can be cut from a piece of 3/4" plywood roughly 13" x 8". About 7" from one end (the back), mark a spot 1/2" up from the edge. With a miter square or combination square, mark 45 lines that intersect at that spot, making a 90 V. Saw to the lines with bandsaw or handsaw, then use the tenon fence to mark screw holes along the back edge. Drill another couple of screw holes to secure the front half of the cradle. Now both fences can be mounted using the same screw holes in the jig, and the toggle clamp works with both.

    Note that screws used to mount the tenon fence (and the toggle clamp or any other hardware mounted on the fence) must be positioned at least 3-3/4" from the bottom of the jig to be absolutely sure you can't damage your saw blade (hence the dotted line drawn on the jig as a constant reminder).

    A handle or knob mounted on the bridge will make the jig easy to handle. With a little bandsaw and rasp work we made a custom plane handle which works like a charm. Be sure to wax and buff the bottom edges of the jig and the inside faces that bear against the fence for easy sliding action.

    Zach Etheridge, Highland Hardware Product Manager

    Original PDF Document:
    ten-jig.pdf
      Posting comments is disabled.

    Latest Articles

    Collapse

    • Small T-Nut for the Left side of Rip Fence and Front of Miter Fence on BT3x saws.
      by LCHIEN
      Small T-nut for the left side of BT3 rip fence or front of miter fence (Article Version)

      11-30-2023, 04:00 PM
      I have found a perfect T-nut for the front of the BT3 miter fence and for the left side of the rip fence (same extrusion used both places)

      Its actually a weld nut, but fits the T-slot described above.

      Weld Nut: #10-24 Thread, Tab, 1/32 in Base Ht, 3/8 in Base Wd, 5/8 in Base Lg, Steel, 50 PK
      Item 1LAJ3 Mfr. Model 1LAJ3​ (WW Graingers)...
      12-07-2023, 12:19 AM
    • Special DIY T-bolt for BT3000 Miter Fence, Rip Fence and Rails
      by LCHIEN
      After a bit more thinking, some universal T-bolts for the rip miter fence make more sense than fixture blocks.
      The two big slots in the rip fence and the miter fence and the front and rear rails are sized to take 1.00 inches wide x 1/8th and 1-1/8" wide x 1/8th.

      So I took some 1/8th flat Aluminum 1.00 inches wide and cut 1-1/8" long to make a 1" x 1-1/8" rectangular plates; I used a short rip fence Block to space the length but not cause a kickback with the...
      07-09-2023, 02:37 PM
    • How to make a BT3x00 Rip Fence/Miter Fence fixture block for mounting jigs
      by LCHIEN

      DIY BT3000 FIXTURE BLOCK for Rip/Miter Fence extrusion

      Simple shop construction - no machining.


      This is intended to fit the top T-track on the Rip and miter fence (uses the same extrusion) on the Ryobi BT3x00 / Craftsman 22811 family of saws
      You must make the Block and Base parts; you can make them 1.5" or 3 inches long or modify to any other length.
      Make the base from 1/8” aluminum bar, you can get 1.5”, 2”, and 3” at Lowes...
      05-24-2023, 09:55 PM
    • Another Thin Strip Jig
      by twistsol
      Ripping thin strips can be accomplished in a number of ways, but this jig is the best I've found so far.

      • There is no need to move the fence so every strip comes out exactly the same.
      • It is incredibly easy to build
      • It keeps your hands well away from the blade the whole time
      • It keeps control of the strip you are ripping all the way through the cut and past the blade
      • It doesn't interfere with the blade guard.
      • You can cut strips from any length of stock
      In the starting position,...
      04-16-2023, 10:42 AM
    • BT3000/BT3100 tall rip fence simple using fence clamps
      by LCHIEN
      BT3000 tall rip fence

      09-12-2021, 07:58 PM
      I have had a tall BT3000 fence for a number of years, I should have used it a few days ago but I didn't because it was too much trouble, And I paid the price as the tall item was a little unstable and I had a hard time controlling it as the two pieces separated and wallowed out a bigger kerf than I wanted at one place.

      Anyway the BT3000 tall fence is generally held on by the T-slots in the side of the rip fence. This is...
      10-20-2021, 03:27 AM
    • Extending rails/rail profiles
      by LCHIEN


      I am finally going to use my BT3000 extension rails.
      My objective is to have some easily attachable rail extensions rather than a full time wide BT3000 using two full rails taking up a lot of space and requiring table support under the right side as many do.
      I just want some wider support but not to do full 4x8 sheets of ply... if I need that, I'll break the sheet down on some sawhorses with a circ saw and some guides.

      I think I am going to cut my extension...
      08-14-2021, 11:32 AM

    The SawdustZone Statistics

    Collapse

    Topics: 61,284   Posts: 558,559   Members: 20,628   Active Members: 63
    Welcome to our newest member, harveywall.

    What's Going On

    Collapse

    There are currently 3039 users online. 2 members and 3037 guests.

    Most users ever online was 11,606 at 02:28 AM on 03-29-2024.

    Working...