I've never used a router before but the postman has just turned up with my first; the OF1010. To complete my introduction to routing I now need some bits. I've researched the various types but I'm still a little unsure as to the subtle differences between them and when one type might be more appropriate to use than another. This is where expert FOG input will hopefully chime in and guide me on my way.
The first project I want to do is to cut a 6mm wide groove in some oak and a corresponding tongue/rebate in some MDF. Please see the attached sketch.
At the 6mm diameter size I note that Festool offer the following (and I'm looking at Festool because I understand that their bits are high quality and I'm in the UK so availability of 8mm isn't an issue for me):
Router cutter HW, solid hard metal with base blade, shank 8 mm (490955)
Spiral router cutter HS with base blade, shank 8 mm (490944)
They are both described by Festool as being suitable for the same tasks though: grooving, rebating, long-hole cutting, drilling. So, when might one want to choose the straight cut option over the spiral? Would the HW straight cutter be better for routing in Oak because a) the spiral is only HS so better for soft materials unless I pay twice as much-ish for the HW option 490978 and b) the spiral would potentially give tearout?
I then need to do the rebate which is a 10mm wide step and a shade over 6mm deep. I obviously need something bigger than diameter 10mm and was thinking of getting a diameter 18mm bit for good measure, assuming that I might be able to do this in one slow pass? Here, Festool offer the following:
Router cutter HW with fitted base blade, shank 8 mm (490969)
Spiral router cutter HS with base blade, shank 8 mm (490950)
As this rebate would just be in MDF, I'm assuming the 18mm spiral bit would be fine for me?
Any help or other suggestions as to what to use in this instance would be gratefully received.
Thanks,
Ian
The first project I want to do is to cut a 6mm wide groove in some oak and a corresponding tongue/rebate in some MDF. Please see the attached sketch.
At the 6mm diameter size I note that Festool offer the following (and I'm looking at Festool because I understand that their bits are high quality and I'm in the UK so availability of 8mm isn't an issue for me):
Router cutter HW, solid hard metal with base blade, shank 8 mm (490955)
Spiral router cutter HS with base blade, shank 8 mm (490944)
They are both described by Festool as being suitable for the same tasks though: grooving, rebating, long-hole cutting, drilling. So, when might one want to choose the straight cut option over the spiral? Would the HW straight cutter be better for routing in Oak because a) the spiral is only HS so better for soft materials unless I pay twice as much-ish for the HW option 490978 and b) the spiral would potentially give tearout?
I then need to do the rebate which is a 10mm wide step and a shade over 6mm deep. I obviously need something bigger than diameter 10mm and was thinking of getting a diameter 18mm bit for good measure, assuming that I might be able to do this in one slow pass? Here, Festool offer the following:
Router cutter HW with fitted base blade, shank 8 mm (490969)
Spiral router cutter HS with base blade, shank 8 mm (490950)
As this rebate would just be in MDF, I'm assuming the 18mm spiral bit would be fine for me?
Any help or other suggestions as to what to use in this instance would be gratefully received.
Thanks,
Ian