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Router suggestions?

BellyUpFish

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I think it's time for a router..

I've been pretty happy with the Ridgid tools I've used and am thinking about giving them a shot.

Any suggestions before I do?
 
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dmlehmann

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Apr 17, 2014
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No expert here, but I bought a Bosch Colt. It works fantastic. I bought the kit that came with a few guided and will buy the plunge base later. I think your selection comes down to what you need the router to be able to do. I like the smaller, more manageable size of the Colt compared to full-sized routers. It can do most anything a larger one can do, but it only takes smaller bits.
 

Tripp2012

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I've heard good things about the Ridgid routers, but never used one myself. I have 2 Bosch routers a small Colt and a 1617EVSPK 2.25hp. I've been very happy with both the little colt will surprise you what it can do, but it's limited to 1/4 collet. The 1617EVSPK includes both fixed and plunge base and goes on sale for $190 at Lowes often.
 

ford33

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Too many different routers to give an opinion now. What do you plan to machine with the router? Are you planning to use a router table? Do you make plunge cuts into the middle of a part?
 

TLCObsession

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Bellingham, WA
The real standard is Porter Cable. I worked in construction including timber framing and it was all we ever used.

I have a Bosch I like a lot, but I bought it because I got a complete setup for a screaming deal (router with 2 bases, guide, table, bits etc).
 
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BellyUpFish

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Too many different routers to give an opinion now. What do you plan to machine with the router? Are you planning to use a router table? Do you make plunge cuts into the middle of a part?


Mostly wood work..

No table..

Yes to plunge cuts..
 

kf4zht

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Calhoun, GA
Porter Cable is the standard.

I have 2, a Hitachi and the small dewalt with plunge base.

The hitachi is great. Smooth, easy to maneuver, good speed controls. Only issues I have is finding accessories. It will not fit in many lifts due to the body being smaller than most routers of the same HP

The dewalt is really nice for about 75% of the tasks. Breaking edges, flush cutting, small groves, pattern cutting are all easy, plus it is so light you can use it anywhere.

Not sure if you can get by 100% with a small one. They only take 1/4 bits, which is limiting and are easy to overload if turning a cutter of any decent diameter
 

Ross/Kzoo

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Porter Cable is the standard.



Not sure if you can get by 100% with a small one. They only take 1/4 bits, which is limiting and are easy to overload if turning a cutter of any decent diameter

If you wind up doing any amount of routing you will find that a 1/2" collet is a great way to go. I've had 1/4" bits break off and also heat up and spin in the collet. FWIW
 

Jolly Roger

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I use an el cheapo SKIL router. It came with the plunge base also, so to me it was a good deal. I used it to route my counters and it did a great job.
 

PatStroud

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Pawleys Island SC
I got five routers in my shop, each with it's own purpose so it really depends on what you are intending on doing. A good general purpose one would be a PC 690LR.
 

wnstwolf

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I beat the **** out of a porta cable commercial unit for timber from portion of my home. 1" straight bit 4" long went through a lot of bits but that darn tool never flinched. When's and bought a smaller unit still 1/2 collet for router table set up. Great tools.
 

kaffine

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I was first going to suggest Cisco routers :)

For woodworking I would suggest Festool either the 1010 or the 1400 depending on what size you are looking for. The 1010 only accepts 1/4" and 8mm shank bits where the 1400 can accept 1/2" as well.
 

mbatarga

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Porter cable uses the same router/motor body with 3 different style bases - regular, D- handle, and plunge. Makes for different option/application choices.
 
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jgschroeder99

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I have a Milwaukee 5625-20 3.5 hp router in my table. It's a beast, but very heavy to use freehand. For freehand use, I have a Dewalt DW618 2.25 hp. It has plenty of power and a very low center of gravity, so it's easy to control. You can get a plunge base for it, too.
 

Regnar

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Milwaukee 5625-20 has sat in my CNC Router table for 5 years now. Best money I have spent. Way quieter than the Porter Cables.

Dewalt Mini router or Bosch colt for light trimming duties.

Ridgid trim router is under powered and I have one sitting on the shelf. Never bought the full size one because there is no accessories for it. Also the base is a weird size and will not fit any lifts.

Lots of guys like the Tritons. They beg to be in a router table though.
 

cagullett1

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I've heard good things about the Ridgid routers, but never used one myself. I have 2 Bosch routers a small Colt and a 1617EVSPK 2.25hp. I've been very happy with both the little colt will surprise you what it can do, but it's limited to 1/4 collet. The 1617EVSPK includes both fixed and plunge base and goes on sale for $190 at Lowes often.

These are my 2 favorite routers of the few I have. I have one older Porter Cable and like it, but it is not the first one I grab. I leave a roundover bit on it typically. My father in law used to swear by PC until recently. He purchased a new PC and hated it. He did not realize that PC was bought out by Black and Decker back in the early 2000's, and their products aren't as high quality as they used to be. Luckily, I'm slowly getting handed down all his older PC tools. Older PC690's are great, otherwise, I would be looking at what Bosch has to offer.

I forgot to mention, I have the Milwaukee 5625-20 in my router table as well. But I assumed you were looking for something to use free hand. Before I bought the Milwaukee, I used the Bosch 1617 in my table and it performed well.
 
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DRhodes

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I have both the Porter Cable and the Bosch, and can tell you that I never use the porter cable. Here is the models that I have.

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Bosch-2-25-HP-Plunge-and-Fixed-Base-Router-Kit-1617EVSPK/100341666

http://www.homedepot.com/p/Porter-Cable-2-25-HP-Fixed-Base-Router-Kit-892/100672235

I would hands down pick the Bosch over the porter cable. The Porter Cable is loud and vibrates like crazy and is way too heavy for its power. The adjustment mechanism has over 3/8" play between motions. If you tighten the lock to the point that it actually locks the base the adjustment mechanism doesn't move anymore.

I would buy the Bosch. Just my .02.
 

gungatim

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another Porter Cable guy here. one in a table and one out, both regular bases and plunge bases. I only use 1/2" shank bits. they used to sell a kit with the router, regular and plunge base, and edge guide with both 3/8 and 1/2 collets for $179, not sure what the going price is these days...edit - around $209 now but doesn't have the edge guide anymore...
 

tarbellb

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I have a older PC maybe 5-10yrs old. Its nice, built well. But I have heard that the more recent PC stuff is getting shoddy.

I would highly recommend looking at the Bosch, or for a cheaper option the Hitachi.

Again, check the other comments but if your only doing light work I love my 1/4" palm router (Ridgid), so much easier to work with then a big boy.
 

ez-duzit

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Porter cable is the benchmark. Avoid Rigid.

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FMC1959

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^^^^ This is a nice kit. If you think you will get serious down the road, get a big plunge router, later you can get a smaller 1 HP for finer work.

I don't know if Porter Cable bought Delta, I thought for the longest time they were associated where Delta made the stationary machines and PC made the handheld stuff.
 

NoahG

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Porter Cable is now housed under the Stanley-Black&Decker banner.

As far as routers go, PC is the benchmark. I've used old Craftsman, Milwaukee and DeWalt routers and liked them all. I think I prefer the fine adjustment ring on some of the DeWalts.


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dnschmidt

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Well, owning an industrial woodshop I have 37 routers. For the standard base model the PC 690 is hard to beat, for the table Milwaukee makes a 3HP monster that's the best available. In the plunge world the DW625 is the smoothest and the Hitachi plungers give the most bang for the buck. Bosch makes nice stuff but they don't use the industry standard PC template guides. Since I make custom bases for all of my routers this isn't a big deal to me but to a novice it might be. For small routers the Bosch Colt is the winner. For best dust extraction in a plunge router the DW621 wins hands down. There are many things I don't know much about. Routers aren't one of them.
 

cheechi

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If you want it for freehand I would then ask 'what are you routing' as in, what kind of cut, what kind of wood, what frequency are you using it?

You could get a 1 HP Colt trim router, which fits easily in the hand and has a plunge base you could buy. Great little router, not too heavy (heavy enough you never forget you're working with a lethal tool) and the base is square for the times you are doing inside cuts and need that. It only uses 1/4" shank bits and you don't want to try removing crazy amounts on a single pass. Of my four routers, it's the only one I'd want to work overhead or prefer to use horizontally if I could help it.

Or you could get either a Bosch 1617EV or a Dewalt 618PK both come with both fixed & plunge bases. IMO the DW618 is a better version of the 690 PC. Both give you 1/4" & 1/2" collets so there's not much you can't do until you need a table or shaper. Both are compatible with almost any router attachment you could ask for.

My go to for the freehand work is the Bosch 1617 if it's on a bench or fixed piece. The plunge base is amazing. I like it has the D shape instead of a full circle. much easier to follow a straight edge with it. Not that it's terribly hard with the round bases but its one less possibility for the router to come out from under you.

I also own the PC 7518 and it lives (well it's all still packed up) in the table full time. This could but would not be ideal as a handheld router.

The best router is the safest, especially being that you want it handheld. Go touch all the display models. See where all the controls are. You need a clearer picture of what you want to do, what you want your end result to be. That will tell you what things need to be at your fingertips; you mentioned plunge control, you want to find that on every plunge router you try and work with it to where it's comfortable for you. Not saying it would be the end of the world, but depending on the cut you're making you can make a nasty gouge if you're not smooth, that goes for running it along the cut, plunging, whatever.

Certain controls like the plunge depth stop are important, but you set those before the cut. The Bosch & Dewalt ones both mechanically work similar but have very different ways to set them. The dewalt is easier to set but less options (the Bosch gives you control both how deep and 8 steps where it stops, the dewalt just has 3 steps for where it stops) so there's some minor things you might not know just from looking. The speed, power switch, and plunge lever are ones you'll be working with and need your fingers to be able to get them quickly and easily.
 

Tripp2012

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NC
When you have a little time to kill watch this video good info and tips for routing in general.

 

fuzzytek

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I have a older bosch 2hp for general mid to large jobs. I have a porter cable laminate trimmer that I use in similar fashion to what a bosch pony is used for. I have a pc 3.25hp wanting to get into a table.
 

deltaphisig

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Jan 28, 2013
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Dewalt dw816 kit with fixed and plunge bases or a Triton( I have two of these and am very impressed). I also have two PC routers, but they are not the most useful one and done tool for the average joe.


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ddawg16

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I have 3 routers. They are typically set up for different uses. One is a Crasftsman POS.

One is a Porter Cable. It's good...not sure I would say it's that great. It stays attached to my table saw on the side table that also acts as a router table.

My go to router is the Ryobi plunge router. !/2" or 1/4". Variable speed, fairly light. I use the dog **** out of it and it's still going.
 

cagullett1

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^^^^ This is a nice kit. If you think you will get serious down the road, get a big plunge router, later you can get a smaller 1 HP for finer work.

I don't know if Porter Cable bought Delta, I thought for the longest time they were associated where Delta made the stationary machines and PC made the handheld stuff.

That is correct, but that was nearly 20 years ago. In 2004ish, B&D bought both of them.... hence why Delta is now sold in big box stores. The quality of PC and Delta isnt what it was before B&D bought them out.
 
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