NBN Online for the week of May 30, 2005

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

In This Issue:

Front Page
High Court Upholds Tests for Takings Cases
Will You Be the Next Winner of a Digital Camera?
Builders Make Three Wishes to Improve Wetlands Regulation
Coast to Coast
Lumber Market Ready for Short-Term Rally
Politics & Government
Debate on GSE Reform Bill Moves Forward
Economics & Finance
New Home Sales Continue at a Record Pace in April
Housing Affordability Slips in First Quarter
Base Reshuffling Opens Up Development Opportunities
Tips
Builders’ Tip: A Jig for Router-Made Moldings
Business Management
Working With a Trusted Lender Benefits Your Business
Regional Summits to Combat Equipment Thefts
Seniors Housing
What Are You Doing to Capture High-Tech Senior Consumers?
Remodelers
Remodeling Gains Strength in the First Quarter
Education
Education Calendar
Research
New Alternative to Light Bulbs Lasts 15 Years
Construction Safety
OSHA Promotes Landscape Worker Safety
Design
Industry Luminaries to Attend Design Institute
Labor
Superintendent Training to Break Record in Orlando
Building Products
Windows and Doors Reduce Noise
Builder's Engineer
What’s Important
TV
NAHB-Produced Shows on HGTV & DIY — This Week
Endowment
Endowment Awards $87,000 for NAHB Oral History Project
Association News
Florida Among Membership Day Champions
Customize Your Computer’s Cursor With the NBN ‘Hammer’
GM Discount Available on More Than 80 Vehicles
Save More With BuilderBooks.com Rewards
Calendar of Events

Builders’ Tip: A Jig for Router-Made Moldings

[Click for larger image]

I needed a special molding to complete a baseboard detail, but my router table was several hundred miles away on another job. Fortunately, the situation forced me to come up with an alternative method for site-milling trim stock.

I think my new method is faster, more accurate and safer than using a router table — especially if the moldings are narrow and thin.

As shown in the drawing:

  • I used a scrap of 2x stock about 1-foot long and about the width of my router’s base.

  • I cut a lengthwise groove near the middle of the 2x, just a pinch larger than the depth and width of my molding stock.

  • Then I used a hole saw to bore a 1-1⁄2-inch-diameter hole that is offset from the center of the groove. This hole accommodates the router bit and it should be to the left of the groove as you face the fixture. It also ensures that the router bit, which turns clockwise, will be turning into the work as you feed the stock into it.

  • Next, I bored a similar hole in the top of my job site workbench to allow the wood chips an escape route.

  • I positioned my router over the hole in the jig and anchored the router to the table with a pair of clamps. The clamps were arranged on opposite sides of the router’s base, in line with the groove in the 2x stock. By sighting down the groove, I could easily adjust the router, both vertically and horizontally, until I had the bit in the exact position that I needed for the molding profile.

Cutting the moldings is a simple matter of turning on the router and feeding the stock into the groove. In a few minutes I had hundreds of feet of molding. And because the stock was captured in the groove of the jig under the base of the router, my fingers never got near the cutters.

— Bill Young, Berkeley, Calif.

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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