Sporky McGuffin
Light entertainer
Be forewarned that thus isn't going to be another fawning Incra-worship thread, and my recommendation is not to buy one of these combos - they are vastly overpriced and under-engineered. Buy the positioner, if you want the joinery stuff (and can afford to add all the other things you need to make it work), but you can do better on all the rest.
Anyways. I've had home-built router tables, originally just a plate sunk into my workbench, then added the blue Axminster lift, then a new table hung off the back of my tablesaw with a dust enclosure. However, I'd never done a proper fence which was limiting what I could do with it. I'd considered the Axminster cast iron table but emailed WWW for suggestions. My Axminster lift wouldn't fit the Incra table, but my Bosch GMF1400CE will fit the Incea lift so I figured I could sell the old lift (turned out to be a poor assumption on my part!). Ended up spending nearly double what I'd planned but reassured that the Incra gobo was great.
First job; assemble the stand. Which is rubbish. The corner posts are aluminium extrusions, and there are powder coated mild steel stringers to fix 'em together. The stringers attach via bolts and nuts; the nuts slide into the extrusions. Thus means there is absolutely no positive, built-in squaring of the base. On mine one of the stringers had a big gouge in the powdercoat which was clearly there when it was packed. Thanks Incra. Why try harder, eh? Two hours of swearing later and the ******* thing is assembled and square. You'll need some extra washers here, Incra think that tightening a bolt head straight onto a soft powder coat is fine.
We'll skip over the godforsaken wheel kit at this point. It really is dreadful. Put the thing on a proper wheeled base instead.
Next job is to encase the stand - thanks to MikeK for the inspiration. Bit of 12mm ply in the back first:
Then the sides and base, and a housing slot in the back for the mid panel to come. So far so good.
Because of the whole aluminium extrusion thing, to put drawers in you need spacers. So I made some. The mallet has already had both practical and therapeutic application.
And three bits of poplar (because that's what I had) to make a partial frame at the front. You can see one of my eBay special drawer slides too. Incra could learn from whoever made them; they're cheap and work perfectly.
Next the middle panel goes in, secured with pocket screws, and then the drawer slides using a spacer block to get them to line up. Then everything comes apart for painting.
And back into the frame.
Imagine yet more swearing; this is my first time making drawers. The drawers are actually fine - 12mm ply front, back, and sides, 6mm base in a housing, pocket screwed together. Getting the base square enough for them to work is another matter and requires a lot of shims, more swearing, and more applications of the mallet.
By this stage I really wish I'd just built a damned cabinet out of 18mm ply. It'd have been quicker, easier, and better. Ho hum. The good news is that it gets a bit better from this point on.
Anyways. I've had home-built router tables, originally just a plate sunk into my workbench, then added the blue Axminster lift, then a new table hung off the back of my tablesaw with a dust enclosure. However, I'd never done a proper fence which was limiting what I could do with it. I'd considered the Axminster cast iron table but emailed WWW for suggestions. My Axminster lift wouldn't fit the Incra table, but my Bosch GMF1400CE will fit the Incea lift so I figured I could sell the old lift (turned out to be a poor assumption on my part!). Ended up spending nearly double what I'd planned but reassured that the Incra gobo was great.
First job; assemble the stand. Which is rubbish. The corner posts are aluminium extrusions, and there are powder coated mild steel stringers to fix 'em together. The stringers attach via bolts and nuts; the nuts slide into the extrusions. Thus means there is absolutely no positive, built-in squaring of the base. On mine one of the stringers had a big gouge in the powdercoat which was clearly there when it was packed. Thanks Incra. Why try harder, eh? Two hours of swearing later and the ******* thing is assembled and square. You'll need some extra washers here, Incra think that tightening a bolt head straight onto a soft powder coat is fine.
We'll skip over the godforsaken wheel kit at this point. It really is dreadful. Put the thing on a proper wheeled base instead.
Next job is to encase the stand - thanks to MikeK for the inspiration. Bit of 12mm ply in the back first:
Then the sides and base, and a housing slot in the back for the mid panel to come. So far so good.
Because of the whole aluminium extrusion thing, to put drawers in you need spacers. So I made some. The mallet has already had both practical and therapeutic application.
And three bits of poplar (because that's what I had) to make a partial frame at the front. You can see one of my eBay special drawer slides too. Incra could learn from whoever made them; they're cheap and work perfectly.
Next the middle panel goes in, secured with pocket screws, and then the drawer slides using a spacer block to get them to line up. Then everything comes apart for painting.
And back into the frame.
Imagine yet more swearing; this is my first time making drawers. The drawers are actually fine - 12mm ply front, back, and sides, 6mm base in a housing, pocket screwed together. Getting the base square enough for them to work is another matter and requires a lot of shims, more swearing, and more applications of the mallet.
By this stage I really wish I'd just built a damned cabinet out of 18mm ply. It'd have been quicker, easier, and better. Ho hum. The good news is that it gets a bit better from this point on.
Last edited: