Master the Router Table || Pattern Routing Made Easy
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- Опубликовано: 9 фев 2024
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Jason - you have one of the best channels on RUclips. Every week I not only learn several new things, tips and techniques but also am entertained. Education with humor - the best. However, I have to say this week's video went even further. When your wife casually interrupted your filming and the resultant look on your face is priceless.... Very funny and, honestly, appropo for you. Keep'm coming.
Agreed
Nothing like a little Bourbon with my morning coffee
Man I wish I could post a pic here of the cabinet bases and built in shelves (backlit w/ WLED) I built using your videos. You help us normal DIY people build amazing things, please keep up the great work!!
I'm really interested in seeing your work!!!
Two simpler ways to perhaps think about preventing a climb cut: 1) remember to push against the direction of rotation of the router bit. 2) If you have your template to the right of the router bit (i.e. you are routing on the left side of your piece) you are routing on the wrong side. My 1 1/4 cents (due to inflation). Love your channel Jason.
Jason!!! Jason!!! Jason!!! Great tutorial!!! It's so nice to have all that info in one place. And, your style of presentation provides plenty of memory anchors. Way to go!!! 👏👏👏
Just wanted to say a big thank you for explaining the whole bearing mounted orientation as well as the upcut/downcut/compression difference. This video finally made it make sense.
As a CNC freak, using templates cut on the CNC with a real router can actually be faster than using a CNC to cut the entire piece. This is especially true when there are inner pockets involved, which take forever on the CNC. With a nice fat router base and a beefy bit, a plunge router will fly through those.
Often while cutting somthing out on the cnc I think to myself " I could have had this done by now if I used a template" yet still no templates have been made haha
Yep. Can confirm. I do my templates on the CNC for accuracy and then use a bandsaw and router to do the actually pieces. Comes out cleaner (don’t need to worry about tear out or blow out) and it’s quicker.
@@austinhall485 luckily with the CNC you could work on other parts of the project while the robot does its thing. That's what really makes the CNC faster, even though it may seem slower for the CNC to actually cut the piece.
@sparrowhawk009 yes and no. Not all projects allow you to just walk away without risk of somthing going wrong. Many times in the middle of a run I've lost suction on my material and comes loose, if I walked away and did somthing else it could have been very problematic. Usually when running 600ipm I'm not just walking away and hoping for the best lol
@@austinhall485 yes, you still need to keep an eye on it, but you can still work on another part of the project or clean up the shop a bit while the CNC is doing it's thing. You don't have to stare at it the entire time. Though I normally find those videos fascinating 😀
Bushing suck because of the sizing issue, but, you will never wear out your template. I use CA glue on the edges of MDF templates to harden them so the bearing doesn't slowly eat them.
I have always 'sized' the edges of MDF templates with 1# cut shellac. I use store bought, ready to use shellac and reduce it by 2/3 with denatured alcohol to achieve the 1# cut criteria. Two coats...one right after the other...quick scuff with some abrasive in the 220 grit range. I then rub that edge with a scant wipe of paste wax. I have templates well over twenty years old that have held up using this method.
But...the most important thing is to protect that edge from wear, so whatever you are comfortable with is likely what is gonna work for you. If you put 100 woodchucks in a room, you are likely gonna find twenty or thirty ways to attack a problem...and they will all work! 😂
@@woodrowsmith3400 i have indeed used shellac too. The CA is harder, but I haven’t had issues with shellac either.
Nice, learned a new trick. I've used minwax wood hardener, because I do restoration work, so l always have it handy. I think I will also try Woodrows shellac trick. Thanks you guys and big thanks to Jason!
The "peg" as you mention is called a "starter pin". I can confirm it is MANDATORY when using a straight knife cutter bit. With this type of bit, you need to realize that the full length of the cutter comes in contact with the piece when engaged. It tries to bite very aggressively and try to pull the part or kick it out. It is very dangerous. I strongly encourage people using the compression or at least the spiral bit type. At all time, there is less cutter length inside the wood which provides a more constant pull torque on you. Thanks for the video, I am pretty sure this will save a few fingers.
I always seem to be fighting my router when it's in the table. The wood always seems to jump, kick back, or have lots of tear out/blowout. I always thought it was the direction of the wood grain or the speed that I run the router. I've only been using straight blade bits...time to upgrade I guess.
Comprehensive and entertaining. I watch a ton of RUclips and this may be the best, most concise and complete info on template routing and routing in general. We'll done Mr. Peech
For the direction, I just marked an arrow with sharpie on my table to show the rotation and the direction in which to feed material.
2:36 the video literally jumped to an ad right after “the end” popped up almost like it really was the end of the video. It got me for a second.
Dude!!!… you are freakin hilarious!! You make these videos so entertaining the whole time you are educating the masses. I had a drafting teacher in high school that had a fantastic sense of humour that made learning so fun. You are the same.
The first templates I made, I just sent the SVG file to SendCutSend and had them cut it out on 1/4 MDF on their laser and send it to me for like $25. Not the cheapest option, but the results were great. Once I had a jigsaw and a nice belt sander, I was able to print out templates myself, rough cut with the jigsaw, and shape with the sander. It's a little more effort, but it's also a bit quicker and definitely cheaper!
Starting my Saturday with a little Bourbon…? Ok!
Carpet tape: 'round heah, comes in "light", "medium", and "heavy". If you use "heavy" on wood, you're pulling splinters off the surface of your workpiece when you pull it off. If you can pull it off at all. "Light" works just fine, and you really only need tabs of it, not continuous lines.
Some really good advice, A few years ago, I was asked to build a social club bar for a local basketball team. The bar took up an area of approximately 6m x 2m with a sloped front that turned 90° . I designed it like an aeroplane wing, lots of ribs to form the shape, and then clad with laminated mdf followed by timber veneer . I made a pattern for the ribs out of 16mm mdf with an attached bracket to hold it in the vice, the hold down mechanism was an old fridge compressor used as a vacuum pump to a small hole in the centre of the pattern, a thin rubber seal was used around the edge of the pattern and one after another the blanks were seated and routed, the quickest pattern cutting ever.
Most excellent video. I have been making sawdust for 35 years now and have never seen this much authentic information in so little time.
I have been using carpet tape for over thirty years now, and doubt I'll ever even try the CA/blue tape trick. I trust carpet tape. Don't necessarily trust blue tape. I'm good with CA...just kinda sketchy with the adhesive power of a tape that is designed to be removed easily. A roll of carpet tape is a couple bucks more that blue tape, and I can spend a couple bucks more to save my digits.
Hi Jason!
Big fan from Croatia here. I love your videos and I must admit that Ive learned a lot from you. I would like to ask of you one favor though. Could you be so kind and put on a screen metric units when you talk dimmensions. That would help a lot since I get lost in your quarter eights of an inch units. Thank you very much and keep on keeping on!
Thanks for running into this risky endgrain cut. By the way I've never had a chance to use compression bits but you convinced me to buy one pretty soon.
10:04 I just perked up moments before you said what just happened.. lol
I wish I knew about the compression but years ago. Thank you.
Probably the best router tutorial I've seen so far. Everything you said made perfect sense especially explaining the different bits and how they each work, great for a newby like myself. Keep up the awesome work and like everyone else on here l always look forward to when you post
You, my friend, are so entertaining. It's easy to listen to you explaining things, I love it. 😂😎😎
Jason, the best explanation of use of templates on the router that I have seen. I now have the confidence to use straight bits in my router table on very small pieces end grain while feeding by hand! They call me twoey.Just kidding, much better understanding for me as a new woodworker to get these things accomplished. Going to start on a jewelry box for my wife the has rounded drawer fronts. Now I know how to do it. Thanks and please keep providing these videos.
Just take a contrasting sharpie and draw an arrow on your router table for feed direction on each side of the bit. Then you don't have to stop and think about it every time :) And if you built your router table you can put a clear coat of finish over the sharpie to protect it from wearing off.
The sound effects are absolutely epic
Omg thanks so much for this video. I really needed that
What a great video, very informative!
Great info, thanks!
Lots of great tips as usual
This was really helpful, thanks!
Outstanding!
Great Info. Thank you!
Another great video, Jason!! Thank you.
Learned a lot. Thanks
Extremely helpful. Thank you!
So well done, as always. Love it!
Great content as always . Thanks Jason
Good stuff, thanks Jason!
Excellent tutorial!
Well, I learned a lot Happy Days
Love all your videos and the knowledge that you put out and your quarky dad jokes
Super informative-and entertaining too boot. Thanks bro!
Thank you, very good info!
Great video Jason! Thanks.
This might be the best , most informative channel on all of youtube, thank you!
Super informative
Great video, Jason~!
Incredibly helpful!!
Many thanks for sharing!
Thanks for the great instruction!
Great video. I found this really helpful 🙏 thanks
Thank you very helpful to us new guys.
Stunning sounds effects !
Love it! What a good idea for a video.
Great job thanks
This was a really informative video.
Excellent training, as always
Wow.. I actually really enjoyed this..... best yet
Great information, as always.
Totally informative video, learned a ton. So thankful Jason. 👍
This is a really informative video, thanks!
16:30 this actually is a very interesting bit. Not the router bit, the bit in the video, about upcuts and downcuts. And the bit about the special hugs leading to kids - very useful too, Jason!
Your best video for ages ... thanks Jason.
Really nice video, thanks!
nice job. Very enjoyable and informational
The sound effect guy is very talented!
Amazing!
This is by far my favorite "Tips and Tricks" video! Great job guys!
Great explanation of the process. Thanx
Great tutorial!
Thanks Mr. Moth. You covered sooo much in that 👍🏼
Nice job...clearly explained the issues and techniques.
Excited to hear where this journey takes you!
Excellent video. Entertaining and learned valuable information. Thank you.
This is such a great explanation.. i understand so much more than i did before.. thanks!
Just got my router and table today! Let’s Go!
Wow! Nothing left you didn't mention 👏👏👏 thanks
I tried to count how many times you said cut.......too hard. your awesome Jason. thanks for the great content.
Very good info. Thanks!!!
Thank you so much for the deep dive into template routing. I always enjoy all the great information that is delivered with just the right amount of humor. Thank you!
Thank you for this great video! Probably my favorite yet as far as helpful content. I find the doubter super intimidating and you addressed so many of my question about bits. So great. Keep them coming and thanks again for all the helpful content!
One of the most informative, clearly explained pieces on routers! Thank you!
Thank you for the advice!
As always you are very entertaining 😜
The best explanation of how to safely do routing!
Jason, great educational video. Thanks for putting this out for us guys that are still learning this stuff. lol
Fantastic video, Jason, with excellent instruction and examples. Keep up the great work! 👾👾👾
I love watching you, Jason. I'm starting into my woodworking journey this year to honor my father. I love that I can watch you on RUclips and The OldMakers Channel. When I head down south, I'd love to see your workshop. Keep them coming!
This was a video I didn't know I needed until I watched it. As usual, very thorough and entertaining at the same time. Thanks for putting it out there for us!
Thank you so much for the best video I have ever seen on routers. Really informative and fun. Love watching thanks Michael in the uk. 🇬🇧😊
Thanks. That is one of the best instructional videos on using the router!
Love to see you so excited! I am working towards the same dream. Good luck! Go for it!
That's the first time I've heard a really clear explanation of template router cutting. Thanks! I learned a lot!
Awesome tips!
This might be my favorite video you’ve made… thanks for posting great info for us novices.
My bit from bits n bits arrives today. This video got me rather excited for it to arrive.
MORE OF THIS PLEASE! I love my router, but I honestly am winging it when I use it, apart from working safe I really have little idea how to get the most out of my tool, this video was 100% useful to me. Thanks Jason!
Great lesson! Glad to know what that thing-a-bob is for!
Jason, very nicely done. This explains why I had the problems I had even though I use a router table. Thanks.
TIP: you can also take the file for the paper templates to an Office Max or other office supply store that does large size printing. They can print it to size on some nice paper that won’t tear easily. And they usually give it to you in a cardboard tube so you can store it neatly.