NBN Online for the week of May 2, 2005

(Plain Text Version) for full graphical version, click here.

In This Issue:

Front Page
Materials Problems Persist in Robust Housing Market
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
North Dakota Twenty-Fifth State to Enact NOR Law
Coast to Coast
Owners Hold Off on Sales of Homes
Economics & Finance
March New Home Sales Smash Record
Tips
Builders’ Tip: Self-Centering Router Base
Business Management
Creating Effective Incentive Compensation Programs
Seniors Housing
Find Out How to Get Started in the Active Adult Market
Multifamily
Builders Prepare for When Condo Boom Starts to Fade
Remodelers
Relationships Are the Core of the Building Industry
May Is National Home Remodeling Month
Building Systems
Basement From Hell Chosen as Basement of the Year
Concrete Tour Mixes Demos, Networking, Six Plant Visits
Lubbock Building Affordable Concrete Homes
New Course Looks at Insulating Concrete Forms
Education
National Leadership Conference Comes to Texas
Education Calendar
Green Building
Site Plans Preserve Natural Settings, Raise Density
NAHB’s Model Green Guidelines Making News
Wisconsin's Largest Builder a Green Building Proponent
Sales
How to Gain a Prospect's Commitment
Legal
Ask the Lawyer: About Permit Fee Increases
Construction Safety
OSHA Compliance Assistance Web Page Updated
Idaho Training Sessions Focus on Construction Safety
Labor
Students Tour Infill Sites in Pittsburgh
Building Products
Air Conditioner Quietest, Most Efficient Yet
Builder's Engineer
SOOOPerman to the Rescue!
Association News
Endowment Awards Training, Land Use Programs Funds
North Central Florida Honored for Membership Growth and Retention
Get GM Discount on More Than 80 Vehicles
Calendar of Events

Builders’ Tip: Self-Centering Router Base

I recently built and wired a gazebo. I didn’t want conduit intruding on the woodwork so I buried the electrical supply in a post. That meant cutting a groove in the post for the wire — a good job for my router and a 1⁄2-inch straight bit.

[Click for larger imager]

It would have been even easier if I’d had a self-centering router base. Because I didn’t have one, I put one together:

  • As shown in the drawing, I outlined the base of my router on a piece of 1⁄4-inch Lexan. I marked the hole for the bit and three screw holes for attaching the new base to the router and added circular “ears” on opposite sides of the base for guide pins.

  • I bandsawed out the new base, smoothed the edges and set about finding the guide pins.

  • In my miscellaneous-hardware drawer, I found a pair of nylon pins for a bifold door. I chucked a 3⁄8-inch bit in the drill press and bored holes, equidistant from the bit hole, in each ear for the pins.

The pins’ shoulders rest on the top of the base, where I secured each one with a couple of drops of adhesive. As shown in the drawing, rotating the router so that the pins bear against the sides of the workpiece centers the bit as it plows its groove.

— Edward Sprouts, Columbus, Ohio

Tips & Techniques provided by Fine Homebuilding.
©2005 The Taunton Press

To request a reprint of this feature, e-mail Mary Lou von der Lancken at Fine Homebuilding. 



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