GC

Garry Collins

16/09/2006 12:34 PM

Router Fence

I remember seeing a rounter fence that had a long screw thread behind the
fence to position the fence. I think it was an individual design.

Any ideas?

Thanks

--
Garry Collins
Remove the spamno from my eamill address.


This topic has 5 replies

tt

"tom"

in reply to Garry Collins on 16/09/2006 12:34 PM

16/09/2006 6:21 AM

Jointech has such a design. Tom
Garry Collins wrote:
> I remember seeing a rounter fence that had a long screw thread behind the
> fence to position the fence. I think it was an individual design.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Thanks
>
> --
> Garry Collins
> Remove the spamno from my eamill address.

mr

"marc rosen"

in reply to Garry Collins on 16/09/2006 12:34 PM

16/09/2006 1:17 PM

Hey Gary,
This is not an individual design but were you referring to something
from Incra like this?

http://www.incra.biz/Products/LS.html

Marc

Garry Collins wrote:
> I remember seeing a rounter fence that had a long screw thread behind the
> fence to position the fence. I think it was an individual design.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Thanks
>
> --
> Garry Collins
> Remove the spamno from my eamill address.

cb

charlie b

in reply to Garry Collins on 16/09/2006 12:34 PM

16/09/2006 7:35 PM

tom wrote:
>
> Jointech has such a design. Tom

The JoinTech Cabinet Maker Fence System for a router table fence
is to a shop made pivoting fence with a long screw thread to move it
as a little red wagon is to a red Ferrrari Testarossa.

http://www.jointech.com/

Invented by a Lockheed engineer, in Silly Cone Valley, who escaped
to
San Antonio and kept refining his idea - AND adding new abilities,
the
JoinTech Cabinet Maker Fence system takes what you can do on a
router table, the ease of use, precision of fence positioning, split
fence
with easily repacable zero clearance inserts, dust collection
through
the fence, . . . .

Bought one, and their table top, mounting plate and rings for around
the bit all at one time - I make one major purchase at each
woodworking
show. Keep finding new uses for it. Now the General International
75-075M - the mortising machine with the XY table, tilting head and
fence that can be swung up to 30 degrees - well it did get used when
I made my work bench - but it's gathered a lot of dust since them.
The JoinTech stays relatively dust free because it gets brushed off
and used quite often.

Buy one, cry once.

charlie b

JL

"John L. Poole"

in reply to Garry Collins on 16/09/2006 12:34 PM

16/09/2006 1:55 PM

Garry Collins wrote:
> I remember seeing a rounter fence that had a long screw thread behind the
> fence to position the fence. I think it was an individual design.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Thanks
>
http://www.patwarner.com/routerfence.html

RP

"R. Pierce Butler"

in reply to Garry Collins on 16/09/2006 12:34 PM

16/09/2006 4:08 PM

Garry Collins <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:

> I remember seeing a rounter fence that had a long screw thread behind
> the fence to position the fence. I think it was an individual design.
>
> Any ideas?
>
> Thanks
>

Freud

http://www.amazon.com/Freud-SH-5-Professional-Micro-Adjustable-
Router/dp/B00005Q7CN/sr=8-1/qid=1158422865/ref=pd_bbs_1/104-4134447-
7835914?ie=UTF8&s=hi


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