Mike Package wrote:
To put the question another way - is it safe for the shank of the bit to contact the material?
I do it all the time with metal but it requires caution to blow the chips out of the way with coolant.
With wood you don't want to use a slow feed rate if you can avoid it. The shank will burn the wood if it dwells too long in one place and the rpm is too high. Use a compressed air stream to make sure you aren't getting chips between the shank and the wood. Don't press your luck too much with regards to depth. If the tool has an inch of cutting length and you try to bury it in a two inch groove you might get away with it but it's not a good idea to rely on this method.
One thing you might try is to cut an initial groove that is offset by .2" or so from the contour line and down to the tool's cutting length. Gives the chips somewhere to go when you finally bury the flutes.
Mind you....don't use a tool that has been sharpened to do this as the diameter of a sharpened tool is going to be less than the original shank. That'll be burnish city.