OPERATION
PROPER FEEDING
The right feed is neither too fast nor too slow. It is the rate at which the bit is being advanced firmly and surely to produce a continuous spiral of uniform chips
There is no fixed rle. You will learn by expedence.,, by listening to the muter motor and by feeling the progress of each cut. If at all possible, always test a cut on a scrap piece of the workpiece wood, beforehand.
i
TOO FAST
SPEED SELECTION
In general, if the material being cut is hard, the cutter size is large, or the depth of cut is deep (maximum 1/8 in.), then your router shouldbe run at slower speeds. When these situations exist, turn the variable speed control selector until the desired speed is reached. NOTE: Carbide cutters cut at higher speeds than steel cutters and should be used when cuffing very hard materials.
RATE OF FEED
IMPORTANT:The whole"secret" of professionalroutingand edgeshapingliesin makinga
FORCEFEEDING
Clean, smoothroutingand edge shapingcan be done only when the bit is revolvingat a relativelyhigh speed and is takingverysmallbitestoproducetiny,cleanlyseveredchips. If yourrouteris forced to move forward too fast, the RPM of the bit becomesslowerthan normalin relationto itsforward movement.As a result,the bit must take bigger bites as it revolves."Biggerbites"mean biggerchips, and a rougher finish. Biggerchips also require more power, whichcould resultin the routermotorbecomingoverloaded.
Your Craftsman Router is an extremely high-speed tool
(25,000 RPM
(toofast)feed. Threethingsthatcause=forcefeeding"arebit
Fig.9
You can always detect=forcefeeding"by the sound ofthe
TOO SLOW FEEDING
It isalso possibleto spoil a cut bymovingthe routerforward too slowly.When it Is advancedintothe work too slowly, a revolvingbitdoes notdig intonewwoodfast enoughtotake
abite;instead,itsimplyscrapesaway
In addition,itis more difficultto contr I a routerwhen the bit isscraping insteadof cutttng.With practicallyno loadonthe motorthe bitwillbe revolvingat close to top RPM, and will havea muchgreaterthan normaltendencytobounceoffthe sides of the cut (especially,if the wood has a pronounced grainwith hardand softareas). As a result,the cutproduced may have rippled,insteadof straightsides. See Figure9.
You can
Page 8