Buying Routers for Woodworking
Looking to buy a new router for your shop? Is this your first router? Are you going to be using it on a router table? These are questions that I am going to attempt to answer using some facts about the products available and so good old fashioned logic.
Lets get to the logic portion of the article first so that we can build around it. Almost all the name brand routers available are good routers to own. Some people swear by brand “x” and some people swear by brand “y” I say, who cares, as long as you pick something that works for you, and has a good reputation. Ask ten different people what router to buy and you will get 10 different answers. Use this information to buy the router you think you want and can afford and go from their. Its kind of like buying a car, some people think their brand is the best, mostly cause they own it, it’s a sentimentality thing. We all had cars we liked and did not like. If you get one you don’t like, sell it. Then buy or try something else. I personally do this all the time. Make the best decision you can and get on to the business of making sawdust.
Fixed Base verses Plunge base
There are two different types of bases available. Fixed base routers are just that, the height of the bit is fixed. This does not mean you cant adjust it, you surely can. It means you can’t adjust it while your using the router. These are the most common types for router tables. Why??? Because they are lighter. They are lighter because they don’t have the plunge mechanism built into the router and that means the router is lighter. So why would you care if its lighter? Well if you have your router mounted to an insert, the heavier routers tend to make acrylic inserts sag over time if you leave them stored in the router table. Its basic physics, weight over time usually wins. If you are smart you will store your router out of the table.
Plunge base routers are very versatile in the shop. If you use your router in a hand held application,you will want to be able to control the depth of the bit while doing your work. Plunge routers allow you to make quick adjustments for the bit and allow you to start with the bit out the work and plunge into it. Can you use them in router tables, yes, Does it work good? Yes, You will still have to take the router out of the table with the insert attached to make small adjustments to the bit height. Have a router lift eliminates some of this. Generally its best to use a fixed base in the table and a plunge base for hand held use.
The third option…..Combination packs. Combo packs allow you to live in the best world since you get both fixed base and plunge based bases in a kit. You can take the fixed base and permanently attach it to your router insert and leave it there. You can simply then take the motor out of the plunge base and use it in the table when need it. Then when you need it for a hand held application, you can simply put it back in the plunge base and its like having two routers in your shop. How cool is that?
Part two of Buying Routers for Woodworking
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Very helpful info. The info on the differences between Fixed Base verses Plunge base routers was very insightful. I think the kits with both are the way to go, or just buying a plunge base router but storing it out of the table.