Rate Of Feed; Feeding Too Fast; Feeding Too Slow - Craftsman 320.17542 Operator's Manual

11.0 amp / variabne speed / 2 peak hp fixed base router
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RATE OF FEED (Figs. 18 and 18a)
The proper
rate of feed depends
on several
factors:
the hardness
and moisture
content
of the workpiece,
the depth of cut, and the cutting
diameter
of the bit,, When
you are
cutting
shallow
grooves
in soft woods
such as pine, you may use a faster
rate of feed.
When making
deep cuts in hardwoods
such as oak, you should
use a slower
rate of feed.,
FEEDING TOO FAST (Fig. 18)
Clean
and smooth
finished
cuts can only
be achieved
when the cutter bit is rotating
at a relatively
high speed,
taking very small
bites, producing
tiny, clean cut chips.
Forcing the feed of the cutter bit forward
too
fast slows the RPM of the cutter bit, and the bit
takes bigger
bites as it rotates° Bigger
bites
mean bigger
chips and a rough finish.
This forcing
action can also cause
the
router
motor to overheaL
Fig. '18
Out
TOOFAST
Cutter
Bit
Shank
Under
extreme
force-feeding
conditions,
the RPMs can become
so stow and the bites
become
so large that chips become
partially
cut off, causing
splintering
and gouging
of the workpiece.
The router will make clean,
smooth
cuts if allowed
to run freely without
the overload
of
forced feeding.
You can detect forced
feeding
by the sound
of the motor.
Its usual
high-pitched
whine will sound
lower and stronger
as it loses speed.
Holding
the router
against
the workpiece
will also be strained
and harder to do
FEEDING
TOO SLOW (Fig. 18a)
When you feed the cutter
bit too slowly,
the rotating
cutter
bit does not cut into
new wood fast enough
to take a bite.
Instead,
it scrapes
away sawdust-like
particles°
This scraping
produces
heat,
which can glaze, burn and mar the cut
in the workpiece
and, in extreme
cases,
overheat
the cutter biL
Fig. 18a
Cut
Bit
Cutter
When the cutter bit is scraping
instead
of cutting, the router is more difficult
to
TOOSLOW
control
as you feed iL
With almost
no load on the motor,
the cutter
bit has a tendency
to bounce
off the sides of
the cut in the workpiece,
producing
a cut with a rippled finish instead of clean straight
side&
29

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