Paperback 8-1/2 x 10-7/8 in. 160 pages, with color photos and drawings
Published 2004 ISBN 978-1-56158-685-1 Product #070769
For most woodworkers, the router is an essential power tool because it can do so much -- whether you are working with solid wood, sheet goods, or veneer. Add a router table and you can cut miles of moldings, machine fine joints, and do all these tasks with precision and ease. Articles contained in this book provide overviews on the different types of routers and router tables and how to use them to finish projects successfully.
- Router safety and maintenance
- Choosing bits and building your collection
- Deciphering the differences between dozens of cutters
- Making and using router jigs
- Getting the most from your router table
- Creating a no-frills, horizontal, or bench-mounted router table
- Router template basics
THE NEW BEST OF FINE WOODWORKING series collects classic articles from the last 10 years of
Fine Woodworking magazine (published between 1992 and 2002). Organized by topic, fully indexed, these books make it easy to access the best woodworking ideas and information straight from the experts.
Introduction
1. Router Basics
Routing Safe and Sound
Routers for Router Tables
Tune Up Your Router
2. Bits and Cutters
All about Router Bits
Sprial Router Bits vs. Straight Router Bits
Router Bits Tackle Cope and Stick
3. Router Joinery
Spline Joinery
Mortising with a Router
Floating-Tenon Joinery
Router Fixture Takes on Angled Tenons
End-Work Router Fixture
Turn a Router into a Joint-Making Machine
4. Router Jigs and Router-Based Machines
Make Your Own Dovetail Jig
Shopmade Dovetail Templates
Compact Tool Makes Dadoes a Snap
Micro-Adjustable Tenon Jig
Shop-Built Horizontal Mortiser
Micro-Adjustable Router Fence
5. Router Tables
No-Frills Router Table
Get the Most from Your Router Table
Bench-Mounted Router Table
Horizontal Router Table
The Ultimate Router Table
6. Template Routing
Template Routing Basics
Router Template Collars
Credits
Index
When you take into account its cost and size, the portable router wins hands down as the most resourceful power tool in the woodworking shop. With this machine you can shape profiles; make duplicate copies; cut grooves, rabbets, dovetails, and mortise and tenon joints. For most woodworkers, the router is an essential power tool just because it can do so much, whether you are working with solid wood, sheet goods, or veneer.
I started out woodworking with only a few hand and power tools. No tool did as much for me as a fixed-base, 1-hp router. One of my first large projects was a bookcase, and I put that router to good use. The router allowed me to cut the joinery -- rabbets and dadoes -- and then joint the edges of the raw plywood (using a straightedge as a guide), and finally trim the solid wood edging flush to the plywood surface. Considering the router cost me only $50, it accomplished more than its fair share of work. In the 20 years since, Ive collected a few more routers as well as several accessories and jigs. The most valuable accessory is my shop-built router table, which in many small shops, has taken the place of the spindle shaper. A router table allows you to cut miles of moldings, machine fine joints, and do all of these tasks with precision and ease.
Dovetail jigs are another useful accessory for the router. Although I still like the look of hand-cut dovetails, when I need to crank out a batch of drawers and time is limited, I rely on my dovetail jig. And like most router accessories, you can choose to buy one or to make your own.
As woodworkers have come to rely heavily on this tool, manufacturers have kept pace with the demand for better routers in all types and sizes. There are plunge routers, fixed-base routers, routers appropriate for handheld work, and routers so big theyre best installed in a table. Routers can be had with variable speed (to safely run large-diameter bits) and better mechanisms for precise adjustments. No one router will excel at all tasks; if you get serious about woodworking, you will eventually own more than one.
The router stands out as one of the most innovative twentieth century inventions for the woodshop. As you'll see from the chapters in this book, which have been excerpted from the pages of Fine Woodworking magazine, woodworkers continue to invent new jigs and methods for getting the most out of this tool. Although the router is considered one of the safer tools in the shop, like any power tool, you need to understand its workings and safe operating procedures, which are also covered here. Armed with that knowledge, the routers potential is limited only by your creativity.
Anatole Burkin
editor, Fine Woodworking
Customer Reviews from Amazon
Average Customer Review:
Great for the routing beginner, March 9, 2008
This book is just my speed. Before I started routing, I knew what I wanted to accomplish but knew virtually nothing about routers. This book covers application, execution, and safety considerations in enough detail for me to understand and appreciate. After reading this book I was more comfortable performing routing work for the first time.
Good reprint of several articles, February 8, 2008
This book is a combination of a number of articles from issues of a very excellent magazine. There have been better, more in depth articles in the mag that would have made a good book better.
Useful, But Incomplete, September 14, 2004
There was a time not all that long ago when I had not routers, and now I have three - four if you count my plate joiner. I have made all the standard mistakes and confused purchases that every hobbyist makes. Enough so that, having decided to put together a highly powered router and a 'real' table it decided to actually read a book on routers and find out what it is that I didn't know in the first place.
As this selection of articles from Fine Woodworking demonstrates, there really is a lot to know. They can be used for joining, shaping, decoration, and even as an emergency saw (don't do this if you have any self respect). Understanding the world of bits - type, purpose, and composition is another challenge, one that affects both our pocketbooks and our satisfaction. Working With Routers covers several aspects of these questions and then dives deeply into joinery, jigs, and tables. With an unending supply of things you can build to enhance the power and flexibility of this little, whirling demon.
The fault of this book really is that, while the articles are all interesting, they really don't offer anything like structured and thorough information. Sometimes an article will raise as many questions as it answers. And I know of very few people who actually would need the plans for five separate and distinct router tables. Router coverage in Fine Woodworking has always been a bit weak, and it shows in the gaps left by this set of articles. Still, there is a lot of information here, presented in readables styles with plenty of illustration.
Buy this Book Add to Cart
Reviews provided by data from Amazon.com 