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I had the big Freud Router and it was great, especially for the price.
I have the Triton now and it is excellent in the router table.
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I have the big Triton in a table with external outlet and switch. All I do is flip the external “light switch” and it comes on/off without have to touch the router’s switch. The Triton more or less has a built in lift. Bit changes and adjustments are easy enough. I’d definitely buy it again. It’s a joy to use especially compared to the MV12 Hitachi I had. The Hitachi was ok but using the Triton is much more user friendly. If you watch Ebay you will find a new or near new one below retail.
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Location: Jackson, WY
(03-09-2018, 06:25 PM)Cooler Wrote: I thought I had made it clear, for the cost of a spindle, the shaper can use your 1/4 inch bits. All the shapers will linked will handle 1/2 inch bits. They are easy to hook up to dust collection, and you don’t have to mount and un-mount your router.
The pricy lifts plus a table still don’t make sense to me.
I got one of these.
http://www.routertechnologies.com/routerraizer.htm
Not sure how a high end lift would be different, but for $100, i would not be without this lift, it makes working with my table a breeze.
A carpenter's house is never done.
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I'm repurposing a 25-year old kitchen cart made from hard maple that was just about the right size. Other than $25 for double locking 3" casters, all the rest came from materials I already had on hand (including the cart which was being used in the shop as a materials cart.) I'll repurpose the switch off my old Porter-Cable bench top router table. I still need to get a small piece of plastic laminate for the top.
My big purchase is likely to be the Triton router and Kreg plate.
So, for about $350, I'll have the router table all set, including the router.
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Location: Marina del Rey
My router table cost me ~$25 for a used, cast iron table saw top, and another ~$65 (IIRC) for the under-table router bracket/mount. The rest of it I built myself from leftover aluminum, steel, plywood and acrylic that I had on hand. I built it onto the right side of my Unisaw so I could also use the Unifence on the router table. No lift is necessary. And I've been using this same setup for decades. The Stanley 3-1/2 hp router had come with its own portable base, just like most any other router, so is often used as just a heavy duty router for extra large bits. The entire setup cost a fraction of that of a shaper. I buy only carbide bits, also a fraction the cost of shaper cutters.
Wood is good.
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Location: Madison MS
03-15-2018, 11:31 AM
(This post was last modified: 03-15-2018, 11:32 AM by Eric Commarato.)
(03-09-2018, 06:25 PM)Cooler Wrote: I thought I had made it clear, for the cost of a spindle, the shaper can use your 1/4 inch bits. All the shapers will linked will handle 1/2 inch bits. They are easy to hook up to dust collection, and you don’t have to mount and un-mount your router.
The pricy lifts plus a table still don’t make sense to me.
I couldn't agree with you more. I own a PM 26 that I have had for 20 years, but earlier this year I purchased a Jessum router Lift $350, an Incra 17"LS positioner and fence, another $300 or so. The reason I'm getting into the router table scene is that a shaper won't spin a router bit at the proper rpm to get a clean cut. I think my PM 26 runs about 12,000 RPM, most router bits spin in the 15-22,000 RPM range to achieve an effectively smooth cut. Just saying...
Eric
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The shaper is nice, my brother loves his. But for me I went with the router table and the monster PC router with the variable speeds. I wanted the Incra fence system, I needed it sort of portable and I needed the storage space. I think its a question of what you want to do, and how your shop is setup.