FF

Franz Fripplfrappl

22/04/2005 5:56 AM

Trimming countertop power tool


Looking for tool type, brand and source.

When installing a laminated countertop on kitchen cabinets, the installer
had some sort of router which trimmed the side and back edges of the
counter to fit the contour of the walls. He did this without scribing.

Any idea what power tool this may be? Seemed to be a specialized tool.
Unfortunately installer was somewhat protective of it and would not let
one examine it too close.


This topic has 4 replies

DD

David

in reply to Franz Fripplfrappl on 22/04/2005 5:56 AM

22/04/2005 6:47 AM

Laminate trimmer with a scribe base installed. Porter Cable, among
others, makes such a tool.

Dave

Franz Fripplfrappl wrote:

> Looking for tool type, brand and source.
>
> When installing a laminated countertop on kitchen cabinets, the installer
> had some sort of router which trimmed the side and back edges of the
> counter to fit the contour of the walls. He did this without scribing.
>
> Any idea what power tool this may be? Seemed to be a specialized tool.
> Unfortunately installer was somewhat protective of it and would not let
> one examine it too close.
>
>

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to Franz Fripplfrappl on 22/04/2005 5:56 AM

22/04/2005 9:02 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
Franz Fripplfrappl <[email protected]> wrote:


> Thanks. I checked the site and this may be the gadget used.

Those types of trimmers are designed to trim laminate, not countertops.
They simply don't have the stamina to cut through 11/16 particle
board/MDF with laminate on top. If the countertop is the post-formed
variety, with backsplash already attached, it is possible if the
particle board is undercut ahead of time (either a bevel or a rabbet),
leaving a thin edge, which a trimmer with an offset base can negotiate.

I used a triangular base on a 2 HP Bosch with a bearing bolted on one
corner. I then pulled the counter away from the wall, found the distance
between the bearing and the bit, turned on the router and followed the
wall. Router orientation was critical and not for the squeamish. Corners
would still have to be scribed and finished with a 1" Makita belt sander.
(Those little Makita belt sanders are the cat's pyjamas, too bad they
want so much money for them.)

2 cents, no change.

Br

Ba r r y

in reply to Franz Fripplfrappl on 22/04/2005 5:56 AM

22/04/2005 11:24 AM

On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 05:56:34 -0500, Franz Fripplfrappl <[email protected]>
wrote:


>When installing a laminated countertop on kitchen cabinets, the installer
>had some sort of router which trimmed the side and back edges of the
>counter to fit the contour of the walls. He did this without scribing.
>
>Any idea what power tool this may be?

Possibly something like this, with one of the bases installed:
<http://www.coastaltool.com/cgi-bin/SoftCart.exe/a/port/pr97311.htm?L+coastest+qxfc7656ffb12ab1+1114258263>

Barry

FF

Franz Fripplfrappl

in reply to Franz Fripplfrappl on 22/04/2005 5:56 AM

22/04/2005 7:29 AM

On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 11:24:26 +0000, Ba r r y wrote:

> On Fri, 22 Apr 2005 05:56:34 -0500, Franz Fripplfrappl <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
>>When installing a laminated countertop on kitchen cabinets, the installer
>>had some sort of router which trimmed the side and back edges of the
>>counter to fit the contour of the walls. He did this without scribing.
>>
>>Any idea what power tool this may be?
>
> Possibly something like this, with one of the bases installed:
> <http://www.coastaltool.com/cgi-bin/SoftCart.exe/a/port/pr97311.htm?L+coastest+qxfc7656ffb12ab1+1114258263>
>
> Barry

Thanks. I checked the site and this may be the gadget used.


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