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Posts Tagged ‘router plates’
Router Table Insert Plates
It has been an interesting week in reference to router table insert plates. Lots of questions and lots of comments on different types of plates. One of the biggest comments has been why are router plates all different sizes?
I think the best way to describe it is money. If a manufacture can make their shape conducive to their own brand they will keep you locked in as a customer. What I mean is this, say you buy a router plate from Bench Dog and later on you want to upgrade to a router lift. If you made your table, or bought a Bench Dog table, you would have to buy a Bench Dog Lift because nothing else will fit. Its that simple. Most guys will not start over. It is similiar to computers. I am a PC, but I would really love a Mac. Why, well to be honest PC’s kind of suck. They are bloated with a pig of a operating system, they crash a lot, have all kinds of problems and are always being exploited by hackers. But I am “all in” because of the software I need and use is not available on a Mac and starting over from scratch seems more of a pain than its worth. There is also the money. The Mac costs more than the PC and there you have it. Back to the plates, is one any better than the other? Nope. Just know you may be committing yourself to a brand in the name of budget and time.
Last thought. There has been a lot of questions abot aluminum verses phenolic or acrylic. Aluminum plates are very expensive so does that mean they are better? Not necessarily. You will always have the guys that have to have the very best of everything so aluminum is great for them. But what you really need to look at is what size router are you hanging from the insert. You should never store your router on the insert in the table. Most of us do and that is where the problems start. After a while the gravity bandit comes and your insert is now not flat (acrylic or phenolic). To complicate the matter, some people thing they need the big 3 1/2 HP router in their table. (cause bigger is better right..uh no) So they buy this monster 23lb thing and hang it on a phenolic insert and let it sit in the table for a year. You guessed it, bad news for the insert plate. Why in the world do you need a 3 1/2 HP router in a router table in the first place is beyond me. You still can only shave off so much in a single pass unless you love the smell of burnt wood and dull router bits. If power is your game, buy a shaper.
Routing a Kreg Router Plate To Your Router, Video
This video gives you a good overview of mounting an insert to your router. You can apply this to any router plate brand, however they do have a pretty nifty template that they use for the insert.
- Good visual on how to line up the handles with the plate
- Keeping the router lift hole in a good spot for use
- Marking your base plate and matching it to your router plate
- Line up the very cool template and tape it to the plate
- Remove the base plate and size to a drill bit
- Place base plate face down and center
- Use a drill press to drill holes, this keeps things straight
- Use counter sink bit to keep screws flush
- Connect to router
There really is many ways in which you can do this, but this will get your mind going. Most people really fear the idea of mounting or drilling their own router plate. As you can see its pretty simple.
Router Table Review, Free
Here is a free download of a router table review. It is not exhaustive, but it will give you an excellent idea of what is available and where to get them. Some of this links are not working correctly since its a PDF file, but it will give you some excellent information. Get it by clicking the link below.
Mount DW621 Router on Kreg Precision Router Table Insert Plate
I saw this on you tube the other day and I thought it would be good to add for mounting a router to an insert plate. There are a lot of different ways to do this, but using the routers base plate is the easiest and most accurate. The quality of the video is not great, but it gives you an idea of how to do it. You can use any router base plate but this author uses a dewalt router. I will add some more router insert plate videos as time goes on.
Bench Dog ProMax RT Complete, 40-300
They should have called this one “the Big Dog” instead of Bench Dog, cause its the top of the line in their series. If you want to pull out all the stops on adding a table to your shop this is where you go. Cast iron on the top of a cabinet is the best of the best, giving you strength and stability no matter what season or humidity level in your shop. The cabinet provides some great storage and keeps all your router bits and accessories in one spot. You have to buy the insert separate, but if you spending this much money it really should not matter. $840
The Bench Dog 40-300 is a the Cast Iron top, Pro Fence 32 and Cabinet system. All you have to do is choose your insert of choice.
This cast iron top is heavy duty, it will meet all your expectations for any project that you can throw at it. It is a solid one piece unit weighing in at 100lbs.
- machine ground to .008
- 12 point leveling and locking capabilities
- Fits both Baltic Birch Cabinet and the Steel ProStand
- Dual track miter and t-track, molded into top.
- Fence Slots fit Pro Fence 32
- Insert is sold seperately
Pro Fence (Bench Dog 40-132)
Pro cabinet (Bench Dog 40-110)
- Baltic Birch
- bolt and cross dowel construction
- pull out router bit tray
- built in dust port
- fits pro caster 40-188 (sold seperately)
- Best looking cabinet on the market!
If your looking to order the top and the fence, that item number is called the Bench Dog Pro Max 40-301, Cast Iron table and fence combo
Make sure your order your insert for this table
Bench Dog Large Router Group 1 Insert
Bench Dog Standard Group I Insert
Bench Dog Large Router Group 2
Bench Dog Standard Group 2 Insert
Incra Router Table Lift
If you do a little comparison between Woodpeckers router table lifts and Bench Dog router table lift, you will see that this lift is accurately and competitively priced. If you are thinking about buying a Incra Router Table, this would be the matching lift designed for the table.
INCRA and JessEm Tool, the respected leader in Router Lift innovation, team up to bring you the new INCRA Mast-R-Lift. Precision machined from cast and blanchard ground aircraft grade aluminum, this is the top of the line for JessEm’s lift systems. $289.99
The speed crank with 16 threads per inch provides quick height changes over the 3-3/4″ vertical travel making above the table bit changes fast and easy. The Micro Adjust bezel tracks fine adjustments to .001″ accuracy.
The standard 9-1/4″ x 11-3/4″ plate size fits most existing router table designs and features the exclusive INCRA Magna Lock magnetic throat plate system. Magna Lock throat plates can be removed or added without any special tools. Simply drop any plate into the keyed recess and the Magna Lock plate snaps smartly into place, and is held securely by 4 high energy rare earth magnets.
A perfect flush alignment with the surrounding lift surface is guaranteed. Every INCRA Mast-R-Lift is shipped with 5 Magna Lock throat plates (3/8″, 1″, 1-5/8″, 2-5/8″, 3-5/8″).
The INCRA Mast-R-Lift is designed to fit the Porter Cable 7518, with optional reducer collars available.
INCRA-Jessem Mast-R-Lift
(5) MagnaLOCK Ring Inserts – 3/8″, 1″, 1-5/8″, 2-5/8″, 3-5/8″
Incra Router Table Lift at Tool King.
Router Table Insert Plate Sizes
Router Table Insert Plate Sizes
Ever wonder why different companies make different size router plates? Although it can be somewhat aggravating, it does make sense if you look at it from a business level.
Lets look at a couple of examples:
- First of all, if a company makes a plate that only fits their table.
- A customer comes along and buys that plate to use to build their own table.
- Their table comes out great and they are happy.
- Their table does not come out great so they buy a table from the same place since they already have the plate.
Here is another
- Company makes a plate that only fits their table. Company also makes a lift that is the same dimensions as the insert plate.
- The customer comes along and wants to buy a more inexpensive router table and put the better lift into it, they find out it does not fit and then proceed to decide which they want more, the cool lift or the cheaper table.
The Last Scenario
- Company C buys an insert from a previous made design that is available for purchase. They design and build their line of tables around that insert. This saves company C a lot of time developing and paying for a new plastics mold for a custom design.
- A customer comes along and sees a router plate from company C that looks the same as Company B, and wonders what the difference is.
- There is not difference if you look at the specifications that the vendor lists on their site.
- Noteworthy: A plate that measure 12” x 9” may actually be 12 1/16” x 9 1/8” some vendors take the short cut and say 12” x 9”
Router plate sizes tend to be proprietary since the insert cutouts only fit certain tables. Manufacturers are trying to get people devoted to one particular brand, theirs. The funny thing is it is not true in other aspects of the table. Lets look at miter track or t-track for example. Most miter track is “industry standard”, which means it accepts most third party ¾” accessories. The idea is to be able to sell the accessories as well as the table. Everyone carries accessories and there are some really neat ones out there. Here is the kicker, the “industry standard’ scenario is only as good as the factories specifications that made them. If they are just a hair off, the accessory may have a sloppy fit or may be even too big. I hear all the time that a miter gauge that came with someones table saw should fit this miter track. Actually it should but sometimes tolerances are not always right on the money. This can be from the tooling getting dull that the factory uses to cut or build these accessory parts.
Whether it is a router table insert or a router table accessory, look at the size and determine where you want to be in the future. Chances are pretty good that if you stay with the same vendor, website, company or brand, that you will be in good shape. Just know that there are differences out there and they come mostly from an economic standpoint.









