Operation – Craftsman 315.175130 User Manual

Page 10

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OPERATION

FREEHAND ROUTING

See Figure 9.

When used freehand, your router becomes a flexible

and versatile tool. This flexibility makes it possible to

easily rout signs, relief sculptures, etc.

There are two basic techniques
for freehand routing:

■ Routing letters, grooves, and patterns into wood.

See Figure 9.

■ Routing out the background, leaving the letters

or pattern raised above the surface.

When freehand routing, we suggest the following:

■ Draw or layout the pattern on workpiece.

■ Choose the appropriate cutter.

Note:

A core box or V-groove bit is often used for

routing letters and engraving objects. Straight bits

and ball mills are often used to make relief

carvings. Veining bits are used to carve small,

intricate details.

U

Rout the pattern in two or more passes. Make the

first pass at 25% of the desired depth of cut. This

will provide better control as well as being a guide
for the next pass.

■ Do not

rout deeper than 1/8 in. per pass or cut.

VV WARNING:

Do not use large router bits for

freehand routing. Use of large router bits when

freehand routing could cause loss of control or

create other hazardous conditions that could
cause possible serious personal injury. When

. using a router table, large router bits should be

used for edging only. Do not use router bits that

are larger in diameter than the opening in router

base for any purpose.

RATE OF FEED

IMPORTANT:

The whole “secret" of professional

routing and edge shaping lies in making a careful

setup for the cut to be made and in selecting the

proper rate of feed.

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

— without hogging into the wood to make large

individual chips or, on the other hand, to create only

sawdust. If you are making a small diameter, shallow

groove in soft, dry wood, the proper feed may be

about as fast as you can travel your router along your

guide line. On the other hand, if the bit is a large one,

the cut is deep or the wood is hard to cut, the proper

feed may be a very slow one. A cross-grain cut may

require a slower pace than an identical with grain cut
in the same workpiece.

There is no fixed rule. You will learn by experience

from practice and use. The best rate of feed is

determined by listening to the sound of the router

motor and by feeling the progress of each cut. Always

test a cut on a scrap piece of the workpiece wood,

beforehand.

FORCE FEEDING

Clean, smooth routing and edge shaping can be done
only when the bit is revolving at a relatively high

speed and is taking very small bites to produce tiny,

cleanly severed chips. If your router is forced to move

forward too fast, the RPM of the bit becomes slower

than normal in relation to its fonward movement. As a

result, the bit must take bigger bites as it revolves.

“Bigger bites” mean bigger chips, and a rougher

finish. Bigger chips also require more power, which

could result in the router motor becoming overloaded.

Under extreme force-feeding conditions the relative

RPM of the bit can become so slow — and the bites it

has to take so large — that chips will be partially
knocked off (rather than fully cut off), with resulting

splintering and gouging of the workpiece.

See Figure 10.

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