SW

"Shawn Wilson"

06/03/2005 7:15 PM

new-to-me router maintenance

I just bought my first router - a $15 Sears "Work-Lite" 6.5Amp - at a flea
market. I plugged it in and it works. I didn't get the impression that it
was well taken care of. I don't see any broken pieces or rust, but it's
caked with sawdust that has dried to the point of being cement. And the
other 3 routers the guy was selling were missing switches or had broken
plastic. I was wondering if anyone can suggest a checklist of things I
should do besides chuck it out and buy a good router :o)

Thanks,
Shawn
--
Shawn Wilson
[email protected]
http://www.GlassGiant.com


This topic has 5 replies

RT

Rolling Thunder

in reply to "Shawn Wilson" on 06/03/2005 7:15 PM

07/03/2005 3:38 AM

On Sun, 6 Mar 2005 19:15:12 -0400, "Shawn Wilson"
<[email protected]> wrote:

>I just bought my first router - a $15 Sears "Work-Lite" 6.5Amp - at a flea
>market. I plugged it in and it works. I didn't get the impression that it
>was well taken care of. I don't see any broken pieces or rust, but it's
>caked with sawdust that has dried to the point of being cement. And the
>other 3 routers the guy was selling were missing switches or had broken
>plastic. I was wondering if anyone can suggest a checklist of things I
>should do besides chuck it out and buy a good router :o)
>
>Thanks,
>Shawn

The primary thing to check is the collet. It needs to be clean as a
whistle and hold the bit tightly. If the bearings are rattling
around, chuck it.

Thunder

SW

"Shawn Wilson"

in reply to "Shawn Wilson" on 06/03/2005 7:15 PM

09/03/2005 8:24 AM

> As it seems to work, hang on to it. I have an old Sears (maybe 35 years,
it
> was my first router). I keep a round over bit in it which I just about
> never change. For other work I have other routers, preferably 1/2" chuck.
> I have a Freud FT2000 in the router table, and a PC691 for other work.
When
> Nawm did new shop cabinets, he moved about 15 routers. On Router
Workshop,
> they often grab another router for the next step. You can't have too many
> routers.


Thanks, everyone for the responses. I certainly won't chuck it. If I get a
better one I'm sure I can use this one for something.

The collet is now clean and runs smooth. No rattling. I routed an arc into
the beginning of a longworth chuck last night. It came out clean as a
whistle, though the ARHA made itself known. It was much easier to route at
the end of the arc than the beginning. :o) I don't normally read the posts
about tool specifics unless I have one. Guess I should start. Still, by
akwardly keeping my fingers on the depth knob I was able to get it done.

Thanks again,
Shawn

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "Shawn Wilson" on 06/03/2005 7:15 PM

07/03/2005 5:57 AM

On Sun, 6 Mar 2005 19:15:12 -0400, the inscrutable "Shawn Wilson"
<[email protected]> spake:

>I just bought my first router - a $15 Sears "Work-Lite" 6.5Amp - at a flea
>market. I plugged it in and it works. I didn't get the impression that it
>was well taken care of. I don't see any broken pieces or rust, but it's
>caked with sawdust that has dried to the point of being cement. And the
>other 3 routers the guy was selling were missing switches or had broken
>plastic. I was wondering if anyone can suggest a checklist of things I
>should do besides chuck it out and buy a good router :o)

You should have read here about the ARHA mechanism of the Searz
routahs before even THINKING of buying that, Shawn. The inadvertant
Automatic Random Height Adjuster of those routers has been famous
here and hated by anyone awake enough to notice it. DAGS of the Wreck
for more info.

I've owned enough other Crapsman tools to have lost my pound of flesh
and gallons of blood over the years. I'm glad I didn't own that one,
too.


==========================================================
Save the ||| http://diversify.com
Endangered SKEETS! ||| Web Application Programming
==========================================================

Sa

"Steven and Gail Peterson"

in reply to "Shawn Wilson" on 06/03/2005 7:15 PM

07/03/2005 2:53 PM

As it seems to work, hang on to it. I have an old Sears (maybe 35 years, it
was my first router). I keep a round over bit in it which I just about
never change. For other work I have other routers, preferably 1/2" chuck.
I have a Freud FT2000 in the router table, and a PC691 for other work. When
Nawm did new shop cabinets, he moved about 15 routers. On Router Workshop,
they often grab another router for the next step. You can't have too many
routers.

Steve

"Shawn Wilson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I just bought my first router - a $15 Sears "Work-Lite" 6.5Amp - at a flea
> market. I plugged it in and it works. I didn't get the impression that
> it
> was well taken care of. I don't see any broken pieces or rust, but it's
> caked with sawdust that has dried to the point of being cement. And the
> other 3 routers the guy was selling were missing switches or had broken
> plastic. I was wondering if anyone can suggest a checklist of things I
> should do besides chuck it out and buy a good router :o)
>
> Thanks,
> Shawn
> --
> Shawn Wilson
> [email protected]
> http://www.GlassGiant.com
>
>

EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "Shawn Wilson" on 06/03/2005 7:15 PM

07/03/2005 12:56 AM


"Shawn Wilson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> I was wondering if anyone can suggest a checklist of things I
> should do besides chuck it out and buy a good router :o)
>
Nope, that should do it.


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