You can get a square edge (i.e. two faces at right angles) on the RT, but that's it. Yes, you can square two opposite sides (to the face running on bottom, on the table), but you can't make them parallel, without some sort of jig. If you're not careful you get a wedge-shaped piece of wood, which is arguably more of a nuisance to true with hand planes than a canted one.
I rough cut the sawn stock to pretty-square-but-slightly-oversize on the bandsaw (pretty easy), used the RT to take off saw marks and square one edge (two faces). It's harder than you think: if you let it go out of true, in prep or the first few router passes, it's too easy to follow the fence rather than the table, as you're pushing into it in any case. I then did the rest with hand tools (#5, #4 1/2 and #7 - all I had at the time).
I was making window casements and frames, albeit small ones. One of the biggest issues is that the tallest cutter I could find is
that Wealden one (TXL1412.7M, 75mm, £26.30). It is a very nice cutter, but you only get 73mm usable height, max, as it has to be able to run off the edges of what you're working on.
So your biggest dimension is limited
in the rough sawn stock to about 73mm. You daren't take a deep cut - lots of very shallow passes - as it would (a) put a huge strain on the motor, and (b) risk bending the cutter, wear the bearings, and possibly cause chatter. So it takes ages, and the accuracy is down to the router insert plate and how well you can eyeball a square against the cutter and the fence.
I haven't yet, but I want to find 9" of
straight 1/2" steel round bar, to assist in getting things properly square. It would help setup a lot for that sort of thing (and setup in general really).
So it worked, but it was nasty, noisy, dusty, felt dangerous, and didn't actually save huge amounts of time over hand tools.
E.