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Sam Berlyn
 
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Default Router Table

Hi,

Can you please tell me what's the point of using a router in a table.. I
could make one but I need to know why first :-)

--
Cheers,

Sam


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On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 23:13:11 -0000, "Sam Berlyn"
wrote:

Hi,

Can you please tell me what's the point of using a router in a table.. I
could make one but I need to know why first :-)



lots of reasons.

control. think about trying to use your router on small pieces of
wood, then think about the router being held still and running the
wood through it.

safety. with the router held down and the wood controlled by fences
and featherboards you can pay more attention to making sure your
fingers stay the heck away from that spinning cutter.

accuracy. think of the router table as a great big base plate, with
the whole thing turned upside down. there is that much more of your
control surface touching the wood.

versatility. with all of that table area available to clamp stuff to
and lots of stuff to clamp to it like fences, featherboards, starting
pins, dust collection nozzles and a pretty much infinite array of bits
and pieces you make up as you go along...

spend a little time surfing over to he
http://www.patwarner.com/


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Sam Berlyn
 
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Default

Hi,

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the same
height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this work?

Sam


wrote in message
...
On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 23:13:11 -0000, "Sam Berlyn"
wrote:

Hi,

Can you please tell me what's the point of using a router in a table.. I
could make one but I need to know why first :-)



lots of reasons.

control. think about trying to use your router on small pieces of
wood, then think about the router being held still and running the
wood through it.

safety. with the router held down and the wood controlled by fences
and featherboards you can pay more attention to making sure your
fingers stay the heck away from that spinning cutter.

accuracy. think of the router table as a great big base plate, with
the whole thing turned upside down. there is that much more of your
control surface touching the wood.

versatility. with all of that table area available to clamp stuff to
and lots of stuff to clamp to it like fences, featherboards, starting
pins, dust collection nozzles and a pretty much infinite array of bits
and pieces you make up as you go along...

spend a little time surfing over to he
http://www.patwarner.com/




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Upscale
 
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Default

"Sam Berlyn" wrote in message news:qZ-

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the

same
height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this

work?

Absolutely. Many people get started with a piece of plywood with a hole in
it as their first router table. After using something like that for awhile,
you'll be much more knowledgeable about what you want in buying a router
table. You may even find depending on your use of it, that you may not need
to buy one.


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Andy Dingley
 
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Default

On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 23:47:50 -0000, "Sam Berlyn"
wrote:

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the same
height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this work?


My Really Rubbish Router Table is a table of MDF on a frame of 1"x2"
softwood, all supported on a ten quid folding workbench leg frame.
The insert is cement board from the back of an old gas fire surround
(a much under-rated material !) It folds for storage and hangs on a
wall.

The fence is an L-girder of MDF.

An old router table of mine was made from plywood and a pair of spare
jaw mounting blocks for a workmate (a cheap spare from B&D). It went
onto my Workmate in place of the rear jaw, then the front jaw clamped
it in place. Not a bad table, but access to the router was poor
because the Workmate frame gets in the way.

I wouldn't build a router table as a "bridge" between two things. It
sounds awkward, it sound big, and it would tie up both your workmate
and your saw horse when you might want to be using them. Giving it
its own legs isn't hard.

--
Smert' spamionam


  #6   Report Post  
Mark Jerde
 
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Default

Sam Berlyn wrote:
Hi,

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse
the same height as my workmate, then a board that would go between.
Would this work?


To give you ideas of what others have done, this is a multifunction table
that has a router table option. I may build one someday... ;-)

http://christophermerrill.net/ww/pla...l_Stand_1.html

-- Mark


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George
 
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Default

Some people with lots of years in woodworking are still using an MDO box
which stores under the JET 12"disc 6" belt sander when not in use, then
clamps into the Workmate for action.

Others pay as much for a router/table as they would pay for a decent shaper.

"Upscale" wrote in message
news
"Sam Berlyn" wrote in message news:qZ-

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the

same
height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this

work?

Absolutely. Many people get started with a piece of plywood with a hole in
it as their first router table. After using something like that for

awhile,
you'll be much more knowledgeable about what you want in buying a router
table. You may even find depending on your use of it, that you may not

need
to buy one.




  #8   Report Post  
JMWEBER987
 
Posts: n/a
Default


Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the same
height as my workmate, then a


Try these links for plans utilizing a workmate as a router station.

http://www.sawdustmaking.com/Router%...uter_table.htm

http://www.popularwoodworking.com/fe...ea.asp?id=1108

Mike in Arkansas
  #9   Report Post  
RonB
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Sam Berlyn" wrote in message
...
Hi,

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the
same
height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this
work?

There are lots of opportunities to drop up to $1,000 in a router table -
even more. Some of the best ones I have seen are shop-built, and not
necessarily elaborate.

A local custom woodworker, who does a lot of detail router work including
many jewelry and music boxes (fine-routing intensive) has a pretty basic
setup.

- The tabletop is a section of salvaged kitchen countertop
- The plate is this $35 special:
http://www.mlcswoodworking.com/shops...ate_kit_anchor
- Fence is fairly beefy but simple 1x4 construction, held to the tabletop
with glue clamps. No laminates, inserts, etc. He does have a simple dust
collection port screwed to it.
- The table is 2x4s, a recent upgrade from sawhorses.

He considers this a vast improvement over the sheet of plywood with a router
screwed to its bottom that he used for 20 years. Did damn good work on it
though.


  #10   Report Post  
J. Clarke
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Sam Berlyn wrote:

Hi,

Could I build a "portable" router table, being building a sawhorse the
same height as my workmate, then a board that would go between. Would this
work?


I would think that making one that just clamped into the Workmate would be
easier. As to why you would want one, the bottom line is that if you don't
know why then you don't need one.

The main benefit is that you move the stock and not the router--that in many
cases gives you more control. Beyond that you can add features to the
table that let you do things more precisely than you can easily do
hand-held.

You might want to look through Pat Warner's site http://www.patwarner.com
to get some ideas of what you can do with one.



Sam


wrote in message
...
On Sat, 20 Nov 2004 23:13:11 -0000, "Sam Berlyn"
wrote:

Hi,

Can you please tell me what's the point of using a router in a table.. I
could make one but I need to know why first :-)



lots of reasons.

control. think about trying to use your router on small pieces of
wood, then think about the router being held still and running the
wood through it.

safety. with the router held down and the wood controlled by fences
and featherboards you can pay more attention to making sure your
fingers stay the heck away from that spinning cutter.

accuracy. think of the router table as a great big base plate, with
the whole thing turned upside down. there is that much more of your
control surface touching the wood.

versatility. with all of that table area available to clamp stuff to
and lots of stuff to clamp to it like fences, featherboards, starting
pins, dust collection nozzles and a pretty much infinite array of bits
and pieces you make up as you go along...

spend a little time surfing over to he
http://www.patwarner.com/



--
--John
Reply to jclarke at ae tee tee global dot net
(was jclarke at eye bee em dot net)


  #11   Report Post  
Ken Yee
 
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Default

"J. Clarke" wrote in
:

I would think that making one that just clamped into the Workmate
would be easier.


Yep...like this one :-)
http://www.popularwoodworking.com/fe...ea.asp?id=1108


ken
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