ScottyT
Established Member
I am currently making some louvre doors for a couple of air conditioning rooms somewhere up in the capitol, and it got me thinking as I was on the machine, I wonder how many people have one, use one or used to use one or have no idea what one is at all?
I am an enormous fan and could not be without one personally, but given the prices of them these days (not far off scrap value) and the shift from a more hands on/mechanical machining approach to a digital world of mass production and super low prices I wonder if they are becoming a bit of a dying breed?
Anyhow I thought I would do a thread on the basics of the machine, it’s principal purposes (atleast for myself I am sure they have been utilised in 1000’s of ways) and how incredibly versatile and accurate they are.
Here is the one I use and have been using for the last 14 years (yikes)
Also known as a pin router (I’ll get into that) it’s a very basic tool, the table rises up and down, the head of the machine that houses the Chuck goes up and down via a foot pedal and there is a hole exactly centre over the head that houses a pin.
The wheel is for the table height, and the foot pedal is for the head rise and fall (the cutter essentially)
The head of the machine
The Chuck that takes a selection of imperial collets to hold the tooling
A 3 way depth stop turret (top) and the side mounted handle below is to keep the head in the ‘top’ position off of the foot pedal.
Some collets and basic tooling kept behind the machine
And here is the pin (shiny upstand in the centre of the table) and my hand is on its selector, you can move the pin up and down in 3 positions from this lever.
I have posted this thread in this section because almost all work is run off of either jigs or templates, all made up for whatever the job may be. A fence is used occasionally if I am paneling or running chamfers.
The beauty of this machine is its ability to repeat work very accurately very quickly, if my jigs and templates are made well it’ll take care of the rest.
I will try to show as best as I can some work it has done for me over the years and the jigs and templates etc.
Unfortunately I only have the louvre jig to go into great detail with accompanying photos of the work as that is what I am working on now, but I have a heap of templates and jigs I can post up without photos of what they were used for so you can get a feel for it.
I am an enormous fan and could not be without one personally, but given the prices of them these days (not far off scrap value) and the shift from a more hands on/mechanical machining approach to a digital world of mass production and super low prices I wonder if they are becoming a bit of a dying breed?
Anyhow I thought I would do a thread on the basics of the machine, it’s principal purposes (atleast for myself I am sure they have been utilised in 1000’s of ways) and how incredibly versatile and accurate they are.
Here is the one I use and have been using for the last 14 years (yikes)
Also known as a pin router (I’ll get into that) it’s a very basic tool, the table rises up and down, the head of the machine that houses the Chuck goes up and down via a foot pedal and there is a hole exactly centre over the head that houses a pin.
The wheel is for the table height, and the foot pedal is for the head rise and fall (the cutter essentially)
The head of the machine
The Chuck that takes a selection of imperial collets to hold the tooling
A 3 way depth stop turret (top) and the side mounted handle below is to keep the head in the ‘top’ position off of the foot pedal.
Some collets and basic tooling kept behind the machine
And here is the pin (shiny upstand in the centre of the table) and my hand is on its selector, you can move the pin up and down in 3 positions from this lever.
I have posted this thread in this section because almost all work is run off of either jigs or templates, all made up for whatever the job may be. A fence is used occasionally if I am paneling or running chamfers.
The beauty of this machine is its ability to repeat work very accurately very quickly, if my jigs and templates are made well it’ll take care of the rest.
I will try to show as best as I can some work it has done for me over the years and the jigs and templates etc.
Unfortunately I only have the louvre jig to go into great detail with accompanying photos of the work as that is what I am working on now, but I have a heap of templates and jigs I can post up without photos of what they were used for so you can get a feel for it.