The table-attachment I have is a square of masonite about 2 feet square with rectangular notch about 5"wide and 12"long cut out of the lower left hand corner. (see pictures) It has two holes drilled in it to line up with the holes that attach the splitter blade. The upper right hand corner has a dowel leg attached underneath for support. I remove the splitter blade and the guide ring for the bevel cut so only the one ring for the straight cut is on the machine. The masonite lays on top of the machine and screws down through the two holes the splitter blade is attached to with a couple of pan-head screws (I counter-sunk the holes so the screws lay flush with the top. This set up allows you to lay a large or small disk of leather or rawhide on the table and pull the string through the cutter. The disk does not have to be perfectly round, if you go slowly and carefully you can cut around odd-ball shapes and not have near as much waste. When the shape of the disk gets to the point that you are having too sharp a corner, you simply trim the edge to a smoother curve and continue. It works great and when you're done rough cutting your strings, you take the table off, hang it on the wall and put the splitter blade back on.... My cutter is OLD, probably not exactly like the new ones, if you like I can send you a tracing of this one. It's pretty basic though ..you should be able to figure out any necessary modifications..... Hope this helps -- slickfork