Router table top cover

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Gadjet

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Hi,
I'm just putting together a router table and I was wondering if the MDF I'm using is good enough or is there some hard-wearing veneer that can be bonded to the top?
If so, where's a good place to buy it from?
Cheers
 
One of the members here made a router table using a piece of laminated kitchen top from one of the hardware stores.
 
My proof of concept phase so far :)
20230331_172110.jpg
 
Hi,
I'm just putting together a router table and I was wondering if the MDF I'm using is good enough or is there some hard-wearing veneer that can be bonded to the top?
If so, where's a good place to buy it from?
Cheers
Kitchen worktop is a good posibility but I would look seriously at 'Tufnol' sheet which is available from 1mm to 50mm thick which you could use as a 'surface' ( 1, 2 3mm thick) or a solid (12, 15, 20 . . . mm) - - - available from directplastics.co.uk along with many other hard-wearing industrial plastics such as HDPE, PE500, PEEK and others - any of which would be vastly superior to MDF (in any form).
 
I would imagine it makes a nice slippery surface to make passing wood through the cutter easy. I think the price is prohibitive for using it as a solid top, 25mm @ 600mm square is £477 inc vat and at 30mm £534 inc so using it just as a cover or surface is more cost effective, those prices are in the same ball park as buying a ready made, ready to use router table / router table top. Buying 6mm same size as a cover is £115.

Another product to look at are the composite panels used in vehicle body construction, things like the delivery vehicles used by the supermarkets and other vehicles with a specialised purpose.
 
Pray tell what's the roller pressure finger alternative thingybob?
I bought it from Banggood, it's rollers only roll one way so in therory stops the wood from backfeeding (not the reason I bought them) also the wheels are angled in towards the fence pulling the wood against the fence as it goes through, I made an error though as I thought the price was for two but it was only for one, my fault for not reading the details properly :-( anyway it's a really good quality bit of kit.
 
Kitchen worktop is a good posibility but I would look seriously at 'Tufnol' sheet which is available from 1mm to 50mm thick which you could use as a 'surface' ( 1, 2 3mm thick) or a solid (12, 15, 20 . . . mm) - - - available from directplastics.co.uk along with many other hard-wearing industrial plastics such as HDPE, PE500, PEEK and others - any of which would be vastly superior to MDF (in any form).
I was looking at some 1mm tufnol sheets as a way forward.
 
Most router tables use a plate to fix the router to, so most ware will be on the plate not the table as the finger boards will be around the cutter
 
I would imagine it makes a nice slippery surface to make passing wood through the cutter easy. I think the price is prohibitive for using it as a solid top, 25mm @ 600mm square is £477 inc vat and at 30mm £534 inc so using it just as a cover or surface is more cost effective, those prices are in the same ball park as buying a ready made, ready to use router table / router table top. Buying 6mm same size as a cover is £115.

Another product to look at are the composite panels used in vehicle body construction, things like the delivery vehicles used by the supermarkets and other vehicles with a specialised purpose.
Without quoting or referencing my post I wasn't sure that you were talking about Tufnol @Spectric :unsure: The figures you quote do confirm that though.

I agree that Whale brand Tufnol is not a cheap option but Kite Brand at 3mm thick 600 Sq is <£32 - Personally I only buy Whale but then I don't use that much, never bought thicker than 12mm.
 
Personally I only buy Whale but then I don't use that much, never bought thicker than 12mm.
So how does this material machine, cutting and routing wise ? Also how do you fix it to your underlying board, normaly I would have thought they were put on under pressure .
 
So how does this material machine, cutting and routing wise ?
Superbly! - It's essentially a Phenolic Resin impregnated material, Whale is Cotton, Kite is Paper (hence the lower cost) full details Tufnol

I use it for Gears - mostly clock gears but also Myford 20DP Change gears - as well as Clock plates. It is utterly 'stable' over a wide temperature range - I've never had any issue with expansion/contraction.

Drilling, threading, milling, sawing - absolutely no problem, similar to brass, better than Alum.
Also how do you fix it to your underlying board, normaly I would have thought they were put on under pressure .
I've never needed to make up a composite but suspect that if I needed to it would be by screwing together. Should I consider glue for a 1 > 3mm thick sheet, I would try something like EvoStick Contact. - I have fabricated some 'parts' (small) using CA without issue.

I first came across it in the late 50's during my apprenticeship.
 
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