this post was submitted on 18 Oct 2023
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Woodworking
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A handmade home for woodworkers and admirers of woodworkers. Our community icon is submitted by @[email protected] whose father was inspired to start woodworking by Norm and the New Yankee Workshop.
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I don’t see this as a topic of preferences, really, because only a minority of tasks can be done equally well on both.
Watching old episodes of the New Yankee Workshop, I find that Norm often uses a router handheld to do a job that I would do in the table, is why I ask.
You can do many jobs with both, but usually one is a clearly better fit for the job. Only for some things is it a true tossup. Maybe for someone really skilled, like Norm, there’s a higher number of jobs that could be done both ways. For myself, I fear the router and plan any use of it really carefully.
Was Norm in the shop when this happened? Or on site somewhere?
I have seen very few episodes of the New Yankee Workshop outside of the shop.
Quite often, while putting a decorative edge on something (a roundover, ogee, something like that) on a board, he'll rest that board on what looks like a mat of that "eco friendly made of old blue jeans" insulation, and rout it with no actual clamps. Or he'll secure it with dogs to the workbench.
I don't like using a standard router out of the table much either; in high school shop class I had one scare the ever loving hell out of me. Standard Porter Cable router, two knob handles in a "normal" base, with a switch up at the top of the motor. Holding this thing above the work because it's a standard base, I held the router with one hand and reached up to turn it on with the other. The starting torque of the motor loosened the one knob I was gripping the tool with and it spun in my hand. I'm still suspicious of the devious little bastards 20 years later.