I had wanted a palm router for quite some time but for the few times/jobs i would use it for i wasn't happy to pay around £100 for one.... until i seen one for sale in Aldi for £25.
It comes with a nice branded bag, fence, spanner, guide bush, micro adjustment guide, straight bit and spare brushes for the motor.
Router bit came with spots of rust for those that like a little old/vintage feel to their tools.
This is the micro adjustment guide.... it's useless, it attaches to the side of clear part and the black screw piece sits over the router bit but there are no measurements so you would have to measure between it and the base of router then adjust the base........ the easier solution is to just push the base down and measure how much of the bit is past the base with a tape measure/vernier caliper.
I wasn't expecting too much but after a good play around with it i am actually quite happy with it, it works well and a lot quieter than i thought.... i'm now going to build a small router table for it.
Being cheap it doesn't feel cheap at all (excluding accessories of course) and ergonomically it feels good in the hand... the clear base doesn't slide easily over the router so adjustment of the bit depth is a little tedious.
The clamping mechanism sits at the front which i'm not too keen on... maybe to the side may of been nicer but that's just my opinion........ it also closes and locks easily but i suspect under the right usage it may let the clear part (don't know the proper name) slide up or down and mess things up.............. the easy solution to that is to give the nylon lock nut a little extra turn.
The spindle lock is nice and big but... if holding the router like a pint glass and using your thumb to push it in... the edge of the tool isn't sharp nor is it rounded and it does dig into your skin a little.
The fence guide is thin-ish coated aluminium and attaches like so... giving just over 3" of use but it's just a little off square but a little bend in a vice would fix that.
The base is in two parts and is attached with four screws... undoing these screws allows you to put the guide bush in between before screwing back together..... sadly one of the four screws rounded off on first try so now glamorous shouts of it in place.
Overall a good piece of kit for little jobs or little use it will get.
It comes with a nice branded bag, fence, spanner, guide bush, micro adjustment guide, straight bit and spare brushes for the motor.
Router bit came with spots of rust for those that like a little old/vintage feel to their tools.
This is the micro adjustment guide.... it's useless, it attaches to the side of clear part and the black screw piece sits over the router bit but there are no measurements so you would have to measure between it and the base of router then adjust the base........ the easier solution is to just push the base down and measure how much of the bit is past the base with a tape measure/vernier caliper.
I wasn't expecting too much but after a good play around with it i am actually quite happy with it, it works well and a lot quieter than i thought.... i'm now going to build a small router table for it.
Being cheap it doesn't feel cheap at all (excluding accessories of course) and ergonomically it feels good in the hand... the clear base doesn't slide easily over the router so adjustment of the bit depth is a little tedious.
The clamping mechanism sits at the front which i'm not too keen on... maybe to the side may of been nicer but that's just my opinion........ it also closes and locks easily but i suspect under the right usage it may let the clear part (don't know the proper name) slide up or down and mess things up.............. the easy solution to that is to give the nylon lock nut a little extra turn.
The spindle lock is nice and big but... if holding the router like a pint glass and using your thumb to push it in... the edge of the tool isn't sharp nor is it rounded and it does dig into your skin a little.
The fence guide is thin-ish coated aluminium and attaches like so... giving just over 3" of use but it's just a little off square but a little bend in a vice would fix that.
The base is in two parts and is attached with four screws... undoing these screws allows you to put the guide bush in between before screwing back together..... sadly one of the four screws rounded off on first try so now glamorous shouts of it in place.
Overall a good piece of kit for little jobs or little use it will get.