Search My Blog

Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Building your own router lift-out mechanism - Hack a Day

Building your own router lift-out mechanism

posted May 3rd 2011 12:01pm by Mike Szczys
filed under: tool hacks

Adjusting the bit height on a router table can be a pain in the butt. Traditionally you needed to get into the cavity under the table top in order to make these adjustments, and it’s hard to make the adjustment and measure the height at the same time. Modern routers now offer the option to adjust height through a hole in the plate that sits in the router table, but this is usually only found on the more expensive models. Rather than buy a new tool [Urant] built his own router lift.

He’s using recycled closet rails to give his rig some smooth operation. These are the rails and runners that let closet doors hang from the top jamb. He saved them when replacing the closet doors in one of his rooms. There’s a triangular gantry which hosts the router, allowing it to move vertically on the three sets of rails. The threaded rod in the foreground of the picture above lets the woodworker adjust bit height by turning the nut at the top. Once mounted in the router table the nut is accessible through a small hole in the table surface.

tagged: , , ,

Go there...
http://hackaday.com/2011/05/03/building-your-own-router-lift-out-mechanism/?utm_source=feedburner&utm_medium=feed&utm_campaign=Feed%3A+hackaday%2FLgoM+%28Hack+a+Day%29&utm_content=Google+Feedfetcher

I like this one!:) No, I probably wont ever get Around-Tuit though;)

Don

No comments: