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remco
 
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"Evan Gatehouse / Diane Selkirk" wrote in message
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Hi all,

A bit of background:

I'm building a foam/stitched E-glass/carbon fiber/epoxy bridgedeck cabin

for
my 40' catamaran. I *think* I want/need a router to carve rebates in the
foam at edges where taping will occur and also in areas of high loaded
fittings where extra laminate will be applied to avoid lumps.

So now that I've justified my purchase of a router, I began to think of

what
else I could use it for on this and other projects. In the next year or

so
I'm going to be building the interior furniture for this cabin, and

re-doing
galley cabinets, among other projects.

I can see using a router to make profiles in hardwood to trim bulkeads,
round over openings in bin-type lockers, etc. Cut openings in the new

cabin
for recessed bonded in windows. The heaviest plywood on this boat is

going
to be 1/4" with lots of foam/glass cabinets and seating. Wood trim would
never exceed 1"x1". Building an icebox would be easier with one to shape
the lid openings.

I'm thinking a 1-3/4 HP plunge router would be my best choice; a laminate
trimmer seems pretty underpowered for what I may try to do? I'm not and
never will be a super wood worker type of person and envision a mostly

white
painted ply/composite interior with matching varnished hardwood trim to
match what is already existing on the boat. Budget is about $200+ USD

So my questions a

- what size of router is most appropriate for these jobs that I have
described?
- am I leaving out other obvious uses that may require a bigger one?
- weight is important since this tool would stay with me on the boat and
it's a catamaran where I try to keep things light - but should I consider
one of the plunge / fixed base router kits?

Thanks in advance for all your thoughts,


I bought a Hitachi M12V 3 1/4 HP plunge router a while ago and really like
the tool. I've mounted it in a table and use it as a shaper and do a fair
amount of cabinet work with it.
It is a little heavy (as larger routers all are) but very usuable as a hand
router - the slow start is a nice feature so it doesn't jerk out of place.
The price is right at about $160 USD (amazon).

Remco