heimlaga
Established Member
This is the current situation:
I am still on a long time sick leave but I still have some old savings to invest and rebuilding and building tools and machinery a few hours a day is a good form of therapy to stay sane.
I am slowly recovering my health so the plan is that once I am healthy enough to go back to work I have a fully eqipped workshop and can focus more on joinery and less on carpentry than I did before my health broke down.
Making progress with my health...... last week I realized I could use a full size sledgehammer properly for the first time in 15 years.
This is the current situation with my machinery:
I have two full size spindle moulders but it seems like a router table would be nice as a compliment.......... does this make sense?
In my spare parts heaps have the cast iron table and the cast iron quill and spindle unit from a small wood framed spindle moulder. Probably 1910-s or 1920-ies. The spindle is fixed and 1" in diametre. The hole in the table is very small and not sufficient for any modern tooling. I all a totally outdated machine without any place in a 21st century workshop and as the wood frame is gone it doesn't fit a museum either.
My idea for a super cheap yet very heavy duty router table is to weld up a frame from some heavy U-channel that is laying around.
Then weld up a custom router motor mount that fits the bearing block mounts on the old quill unit. That way I can get the most solid router lift in existence north of the Rhine at essentially no cost.
Some 5 years ago when I was thinking about this I had to abandon the idea because there were no suitable router motors on the market and the table is too thick to mount a an ordinary plunge router.
Now I notised that Peter Sefton sells some AUK-tools router motors of suitable power and size..... are they any good?
They outer shell looks just like the Chineese rubbish on Alibaba and Rutlands but if Peter is true to his old habits I suspect the innards of the motor may be something very different from the standard model?
Any thoughts?
I am still on a long time sick leave but I still have some old savings to invest and rebuilding and building tools and machinery a few hours a day is a good form of therapy to stay sane.
I am slowly recovering my health so the plan is that once I am healthy enough to go back to work I have a fully eqipped workshop and can focus more on joinery and less on carpentry than I did before my health broke down.
Making progress with my health...... last week I realized I could use a full size sledgehammer properly for the first time in 15 years.
This is the current situation with my machinery:
I have two full size spindle moulders but it seems like a router table would be nice as a compliment.......... does this make sense?
In my spare parts heaps have the cast iron table and the cast iron quill and spindle unit from a small wood framed spindle moulder. Probably 1910-s or 1920-ies. The spindle is fixed and 1" in diametre. The hole in the table is very small and not sufficient for any modern tooling. I all a totally outdated machine without any place in a 21st century workshop and as the wood frame is gone it doesn't fit a museum either.
My idea for a super cheap yet very heavy duty router table is to weld up a frame from some heavy U-channel that is laying around.
Then weld up a custom router motor mount that fits the bearing block mounts on the old quill unit. That way I can get the most solid router lift in existence north of the Rhine at essentially no cost.
Some 5 years ago when I was thinking about this I had to abandon the idea because there were no suitable router motors on the market and the table is too thick to mount a an ordinary plunge router.
Now I notised that Peter Sefton sells some AUK-tools router motors of suitable power and size..... are they any good?
They outer shell looks just like the Chineese rubbish on Alibaba and Rutlands but if Peter is true to his old habits I suspect the innards of the motor may be something very different from the standard model?
Any thoughts?