ND

"Norm Dresner"

15/02/2009 6:08 PM

Sloped/Angle routing?

The problem: Creating, for example, angled dados and rabbets or other
decorative grooves, with the router.

Yes, I know that angled dados and rabbets can be done with table and radial
arm saws, but I'm looking for something much more general. Perhaps an edge
beading that rises from the bottom to the top of an edge of a board.

Things I've already tried:

1. Attaching an appropriate shim to the bottom of the piece and then run it
across the router table

2. Attaching a shim to the sub-base plate of the router before routing a
piece.


Any other techniques, jigs, etc?

TIA
Norm


This topic has 5 replies

L

in reply to "Norm Dresner" on 15/02/2009 6:08 PM

15/02/2009 7:00 PM

On Feb 15, 3:29 pm, Morris Dovey <[email protected]> wrote:
> Norm Dresner wrote:
> > The problem: Creating, for example, angled dados and rabbets or other
> > decorative grooves, with the router.
>
> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/JBot/
>
> (second photo from bottom) and also something like
>
> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/Bevel/
>
> Easy! :-]

Eat your heart out, Morris

http://www.krtwood.com/disher.html

I'll trade you, straight up ;)

For the OP: You can do a lot with the right jig, but usually they need
to be special made for the task. Might be some ideas there for you.
I would highly not recommend the t-nut knobs though :)

-Kevin

MD

Morris Dovey

in reply to "Norm Dresner" on 15/02/2009 6:08 PM

15/02/2009 2:29 PM

Norm Dresner wrote:
> The problem: Creating, for example, angled dados and rabbets or other
> decorative grooves, with the router.

http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/JBot/

(second photo from bottom) and also something like

http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/Bevel/

Easy! :-]

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

MD

Morris Dovey

in reply to "Norm Dresner" on 15/02/2009 6:08 PM

15/02/2009 9:59 PM

Kevin wrote:
> On Feb 15, 3:29 pm, Morris Dovey <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Norm Dresner wrote:
>>> The problem: Creating, for example, angled dados and rabbets or other
>>> decorative grooves, with the router.
>> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/JBot/
>>
>> (second photo from bottom) and also something like
>>
>> http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/Projects/Bevel/
>>
>> Easy! :-]
>
> Eat your heart out, Morris
>
> http://www.krtwood.com/disher.html

That's pretty cool!

> I'll trade you, straight up ;)

Well, it's not /that/ cool - and I suspect that you'd have altogether
/too/ much fun with a shop-built CNC machine. :)

> For the OP: You can do a lot with the right jig, but usually they need
> to be special made for the task. Might be some ideas there for you.
> I would highly not recommend the t-nut knobs though :)

I found it interesting that Kevin and I both used the same inexpensive
trim router. :)

I think the trick is to dispense with the factory base and build one of
your own to hold the router at an angle while you guide it (perhaps
against a fence clamped to the workpiece) by hand.

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

MD

Morris Dovey

in reply to "Norm Dresner" on 15/02/2009 6:08 PM

16/02/2009 2:35 PM

[email protected] wrote:
> On Feb 15, 10:59 pm, Morris Dovey <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Well, it's not /that/ cool - and I suspect that you'd have altogether
>> /too/ much fun with a shop-built CNC machine. :)
>
> I'm definitely intrigued with the possibilities. Though at the same
> time I like to make things up as I go along, I think involving a CNC
> would require more forethought and planning than how I like to work.

It does that - I enjoy producing the concept and imagining how something
can be made, and I (usually) enjoy the thing made - but as time passes
I'm coming to enjoy the making part less and less.

'Twas fun, tho, to mull through the geometry of cutting your bowl in a
single spiral pass with a round-nosed bit...
>
>> I found it interesting that Kevin and I both used the same inexpensive
>> trim router. :)
>
> Not only is it inexpensive, but it includes the most wonderful aroma.
> You just can't put a price on that, it nearly brought tears to my
> eyes.

LOL They were on sale for $19.95 when I went for mine. I figured that at
that price I'd buy a second for when the first died...

...and thereby assured that the first will outlast me. The upside to the
CNC is that I don't have to get up close and personal with the the thing
- from 5 or 10 feet upwind it doesn't smell at all. :)

--
Morris Dovey
DeSoto Solar
DeSoto, Iowa USA
http://www.iedu.com/DeSoto/

L

in reply to "Norm Dresner" on 15/02/2009 6:08 PM

16/02/2009 11:43 AM

On Feb 15, 10:59 pm, Morris Dovey <[email protected]> wrote:

> Well, it's not /that/ cool - and I suspect that you'd have altogether
> /too/ much fun with a shop-built CNC machine. :)

I'm definitely intrigued with the possibilities. Though at the same
time I like to make things up as I go along, I think involving a CNC
would require more forethought and planning than how I like to work.

> I found it interesting that Kevin and I both used the same inexpensive
> trim router. :)

Not only is it inexpensive, but it includes the most wonderful aroma.
You just can't put a price on that, it nearly brought tears to my
eyes.


-Kevin


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