Not always, with some cutters you can change the bearing. I have the Wealdon flush trim cutter that uses a 19mm bearing as standard to give a flush trim, but on some jobs using a template where the amount of material to be removed varies a lot then I use bearings that are over sized so it takes a smaller cut.rather than having to take a deep pass to engage the bearing
Agreed. An excellent example for using a guide bush plus template rather than a bearing guided bit is making cash till cut-outs in pay station tops. e.g., for bank and building societies. A template, plus guide bush, plus a 12 -16 mm diameter cutter, plus powerful plunge router will do the job very cleanly and efficiently. It's pretty much an identical process to that required for many other applications, e.g., making a sink cut-out in kitchen worktops, cut-outs for letter plates, and so on. True, the job could be done with either a top or bottom bearing edge trimming bit, but that method still requires a template to run the bearing against and a means to cut the cut-out close to the finished size, typically involving drilling a hole or holes with a drill and bit plus a jigsaw, and sometimes a means to minimise chip-out of HPL, veneer or some other form of decorative top surface. Slainte.Routing isn't all about profiling edges, though, and there are circumstances where only a guide bush will do the job. An example could be a plunge cut defined by a template located on the work.
Not common to have the bearing go, but if it does then all to often the result is that you make a right mess of the job. Has happened to me a couple of times. I always try to avoid them.
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