Eric The Viking
Established Member
- Joined
- 19 Jan 2010
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I know the purists will probably wince, but I've had a little Bosch for probably 15 years. I've used it and used it. It's been mounted in a home-made table, it's done countless DIY jobs without complaint, and if it wasn't for a few niggles, it's basically still going strong. It's been undoubtedly one of the most useful Christmas pressies I've ever had.
Sadly though bits are beginning to wear out: the base long ago ceased to be flat - even though it's solid aluminium, it's worn slightly convex. The plunge guides stick annoyingly (have tried practically everything except goat's blood), and the collet is worn (I should replace it if I can get one -note to self: try Miles). I have to say though that the bearings and motor are still fine, and I really have hammered it down the years. It doesn't owe me anything.
The clinching frustration though is that, although I could probably fettle it carefully to keep it going, it doesn't take standard guide bushes. This is a serious limitation for lots of hand-held routing applications. I know I can make up adaptor plates, etc., but it's a lot of messing about without access to a proper workshop, and the accuracy would always be suspect. A Trend base I guess would work, but it adds thickness I really don't want on the bottom.
So, the favourite replacement in the frame as a like-for-like is the Trend T4. On the plus side it's varispeed (my Bosch isn't, although some are), and it takes standard bushes (I think). It's also deeply discounted at the moment, which helps too.
I'm guessing people have been buying bigger routers as a first tool. That doesn't bother me: for my application I don't want big (got that), I want lightweight, handy and well made (the Bosch is Swiss, and the build quality has been evident).
I guess negatives would come from people's experiences. Are the T4s any good as a lightweight, light duty router? I'm not looking for weight and power, but occasional rounding-over and bevelling in situ, trimming, simple grooving and small (1/4") dovetails box joints on the jig.
Are there other, better alternatives out there too that I haven't noticed?
The budget is up to £75, 80 tops. Otherwise it's worth fettling the Bosh for a few more years.
All comments welcome...
Sadly though bits are beginning to wear out: the base long ago ceased to be flat - even though it's solid aluminium, it's worn slightly convex. The plunge guides stick annoyingly (have tried practically everything except goat's blood), and the collet is worn (I should replace it if I can get one -note to self: try Miles). I have to say though that the bearings and motor are still fine, and I really have hammered it down the years. It doesn't owe me anything.
The clinching frustration though is that, although I could probably fettle it carefully to keep it going, it doesn't take standard guide bushes. This is a serious limitation for lots of hand-held routing applications. I know I can make up adaptor plates, etc., but it's a lot of messing about without access to a proper workshop, and the accuracy would always be suspect. A Trend base I guess would work, but it adds thickness I really don't want on the bottom.
So, the favourite replacement in the frame as a like-for-like is the Trend T4. On the plus side it's varispeed (my Bosch isn't, although some are), and it takes standard bushes (I think). It's also deeply discounted at the moment, which helps too.
I'm guessing people have been buying bigger routers as a first tool. That doesn't bother me: for my application I don't want big (got that), I want lightweight, handy and well made (the Bosch is Swiss, and the build quality has been evident).
I guess negatives would come from people's experiences. Are the T4s any good as a lightweight, light duty router? I'm not looking for weight and power, but occasional rounding-over and bevelling in situ, trimming, simple grooving and small (1/4") dovetails box joints on the jig.
Are there other, better alternatives out there too that I haven't noticed?
The budget is up to £75, 80 tops. Otherwise it's worth fettling the Bosh for a few more years.
All comments welcome...