Routing Parallel Grooves
Here's a method for routing evenly spaced parallel grooves on a router
table that is fast, accurate, and doesn't require moving the router
fence for each pass. The trick is to create a set of equal width
spacers, whose width equals the spacing between grooves. After each
routing pass, a spacer is removed to position the work piece for the
next cut. This effectively moves the "fence assembly" backwards each
time by the spacer width.
The nice thing with this technique is that no
measuring is involved -- it's just a matter of making sure the spacers
are equal width which is easy to do if you rip them on a table saw. If
you need to crank out a bunch of fluted columns, spacers can save oodles
of time.
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In the photo to the left, I started with 5 spacers
against the fence in order to rout the groove closest to the inside
edge of the work piece (which happens to be a coffee table leg).
Once that groove was cut, I removed a spacer and cut the next
groove. And so on and so on until the final groove is cut with the
piece directly against the fence. |
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It may be necessary to clamp down the ends of the
spacers to keep them from moving as the work piece slides across the
table. A bit of masking tape across the top of the spacers would
also likely get the job done. It's important to apply firm pressure
against the spacers so the grooves stay parallel. But you already
know that. |
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For this project, I used poplar spacers that were
3/8" wide and 3/4" high. The length was 30" which is the length of
the router table fence. A 1/4" round nose bit was used to cut the
grooves. |
There's another method to routing parallel grooves that only requires
a single spacer. The idea here is to repeatedly move the fence back by
the width of the spacer, a distance that equals the spacing between
grooves. Although not pictured here, the basic technique is:
- Position the fence so the router bit lines up with the location of
the first groove (the one nearest the fence). Rout the first groove.
- Clamp the work piece to the table to hold it in place. Loosen the
fence, place the spacer against the fence and slide the fence until
the spacer is tight against the work piece.
- Unclamp the work piece, remove the spacer, and rout the next
groove by sliding the work piece against the fence.
- Repeat steps 2 and 3 until all grooves are cut.
That's about it. The advantage of this technique is that you can
cut a variable number of grooves with just a single spacer. The
drawback is all the clamping, unclamping, and fence movement involved.
If you have a large number of grooves to machine, the multiple spacer
approach is likely to be faster.
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