Router table - depth of cut

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Love his goggles! :)

Nice idea but would need mods to my fence and table top.
The pins might limit some operations and you could finish up with lots of different thickness's of fibre boards for different sizes? OK for repetitive work though.

Wish he would switch off between each adjustment - those rotating things can do a lot of damage?

Rod
 
Harbo":1czidmo7 said:
Love his goggles! :)

The pins might limit some operations

just make the spacers bigger and put the pins further away from the fence

Harbo":1czidmo7 said:
and you could finish up with lots of different thickness's of fibre boards for different sizes?
Rod

Hardly. I would think 6mm amd 3mm would be plenty.

6mm for larger bits and 3mm for the smaller ones. There is no need for more as the spacers just limit the cut depth for each pass so there you don't need other sizes.
 
Harbo":1eyw3svv said:
Wish he would switch off between each adjustment - those rotating things can do a lot of damage?
Rod

To be fair, his hands were further away from the cutter while removing the spacers than they were when actually machining.
 
Mike Wingate":3le4fkvx said:
A bit repetitive. I just crank the Router Raiser and move the Incra fence.
For on or two pieces that is probably faster.

But for those who have neither and want to make several pieces exactly the same. The method he shows is much easier, better and faster
 
neat idea but time consuming.

Where in Router table law does it say a router has to be in a fixed position?

Why has no one designed the horizontal shift router table? what I mean by this is if you have router on a traverse bed you can wind the router out away from the guide rail and then the second pass will go deeper and so on and so on.
 
Here's the idea but they're using the router the normal way up.

Take the table away and you will be left with the mounting plate,slip this mounting plate into a router table recess but turn it upside down so that the router is normally underneath and we have a traverse router that slides in and out from the guide rail.


http://www.woodrat.com/woodrat.html
 
RussianRouter":3retg8xn said:
neat idea but time consuming.

Where in Router table law does it say a router has to be in a fixed position?

Why has no one designed the horizontal shift router table? what I mean by this is if you have router on a traverse bed you can wind the router out away from the guide rail and then the second pass will go deeper and so on and so on.
I guess it's easier to move the fence.
 

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