As above, the OP is not looking for a cast iron, 400kg spindle moulder, but just a simple router table to run off bits and bobs from the sound of it.
Being the only one that suggested the spindle moulder thus far aside from
@Spectric commenting on my post, I will guess this comment is pointed at me.
In my post, I mentioned "Lightweight spindle moulder such as a Kity 623" which is 70kg or thereabouts, nowhere near 400kg and still miles more versatile than any table router and takes up roughly the same floor space unless you go for a very compact table router which would defeat the objective of wanting to be able to raise panels as
@Wilson joinery wishes to do. Though only a 2HP spindle moulder, it will outperform any router, even ones that claim to be over 3HP as a brushed motor simply does not output much torque as compared to an induction motor. Another factor to take into account is that the spindle moulder is at least half as quiet as a router during running, saving your ears and any agitation from the neighbours if any.
While they do have their place for particular work, I find people very often get drawn into the whole table router nonsense peddled by gizmo merchants which started in the '80s and '90s with the hobbyist woodworking magazines having table router plans in each issue, projects that you could make with your table router, gadgets that you could make for your table router but never actually use because they had no real use, and then above all adverts for router bits on every other page because the main sponsors of these magazines at the time were router bit salesmen. I imagine it's still much the same today only that they're trying to sell you table router setups now that cost several hundred if not over a thousand pounds rather than encouraging you to make your own from scraps of plywood to make a "miniature spindle moulder" as they were once known.
If the plan is to get more serious in the trade, get the more serious machine, it need not be a 400kg three-phase 8HP monster, something small, secondhand, and inexpensive like the Kity, or Scheppach, Elektra Beckum, et al... will be a much easier machine to live with than a table router, by a mile.