Thanks for the comments guys.
You did a good job ,Angie, but I am not quite sure how you use it. But the jig looks great........
@Herb Stoops
In the first picture you can see the pine clamped at the center line. The router sits over it using an edge-guide along the back of the jig. I set the router bit centered across the pine, then move the router to one end of travel, and set the end stop up against the edge-guide rods (locked down by the red knobs). Then I move the router to the other end of travel and set that end stop. I also set the depth to half thickness of the wood width.
Then it's a case of plunge 4mm, rout to other end, plunge another 4mm, rout to other end.... and repeat until I hit the depth stop.
I have a 10mm pocket hole bit from wealdon tool co. which can plunge up to about 55mm, and I've been mortising about 35 to 40mm deep.
Then I gotta make the tenons.....
Using an old bed support plank which was no good for anything else I thicknessed it down to 10mm thick as tenon stock.
I count how many tenons I need for the current job and cut a length of the tenon stock slightly longer than that required for all of them. The tenon stock is then ripped to the same width as the mortise length.
Then I set up a 10mm bead bit and round over both edges.
Once the whole length is prepared I just cut it to length as required.