Home JOINERY & BUILDING Jigs & Fixtures New Jigs and Fixtures Put Repeatability First – From Drill-Based Mortises to...

New Jigs and Fixtures Put Repeatability First – From Drill-Based Mortises to Dovetail-Track Clamping

The newest wave of jigs and fixtures is built around one goal – faster, more repeatable setups without sacrificing accuracy.

What we know

  • Several recent releases focus on simplifying common shop operations like mortising, squaring sled fences, and holding odd-shaped parts during cuts and routing. Link: jigs & fixtures.
  • Kreg’s MortiseMate is designed to create loose tenon mortises using a drill and a specialty cutter, aiming to reduce setup time compared to router-based mortising for some workflows.
  • MicroJig’s Grr-rip Clamp is designed to work in a 1/2-inch, 14-degree dovetail groove, supporting clamp-anywhere style jig building and workholding on custom fixtures.
  • Katz-Moses’ Jig and Sled Square uses kerf-indexing tabs to help set fences square to an existing kerf, useful for crosscut sled tuning and other alignment tasks.

Why it matters for shops

  • Fewer “one-off” setups: Jigs that index off kerfs, grooves, or fixed references reduce measuring mistakes and speed up repeat cuts, especially when multiple people share machines.
  • Cleaner joinery with less rework: Faster alignment and more stable workholding can mean fewer blown shoulders, tapered mortises, and “mystery gaps” when assembling joinery.
  • Safer small-part handling: Better hold-downs and purpose-built clamping approaches help keep hands away from cutters during routing and table saw operations.

What to do now

  • Standardize one workholding “language”: Pick a shop-wide approach (T-track, dovetail-track, dog holes, or a hybrid) so fixtures and clamps stay compatible across benches and machines.
  • Build a setup checklist for repeat cuts: Record fence offsets, stop positions, and bit depths for your most common operations so a “great setup” becomes repeatable, not luck.
  • Run a short test before committing: For any new mortising or clamping system, cut sample joints in your typical hardwoods and sheet goods, then check fit, tearout, and cycle time.

Related topic: hand tools and wood tools.


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