Skip to content
Fine Woodworking
Main Menu
Subscribe
GET THE MAGAZINE & MORE
Magazine Cover
  • Save 69% off the cover price
  • Or, get everything with UNLIMITED, including 40+ years of the online archive.
Subscribe Now!
Subscribe
  • Projects & Plans
  • How-To
  • Shop Tips
  • Tools & Materials
  • Videos
  • Magazine
  • Video Workshops
  • Members
  • Forum
  • Gallery
  • Blogs
  • More
    • Log In
    • Join
    Fine Woodworking Main Menu Subscribe

    Fine Woodworking Project Guides

    Shop Projects

    Guide Home
    Chapter
    • Bench Jigs
    • Machine Jigs and Fixtures
    • Tool Storage
    • Shop Storage
    • Workbenches
    • Shop Helpers
    Projects and Plans

    Working-Class Router Table

    This easy-to-build table is about results, not appearances.

    Author Headshot By Marc Adams #244–Tools & Shops 2015 Issue
    router table

    Synopsis: With a good router table, a woodworker can cut joinery, raise panels, produce moldings, and even edge-joint boards. This one, built by woodworking teacher Marc Adams, has been tested under fire at his school for seven years and has remained accurate and strong. It’s also inexpensive, because it is built entirely of medium-density fiberboard (MDF). The MDF makes it heavy, durable, and stable, with a slick surface that’s perfect for routing. The base is solid, with two big shelves for bits and accessories, and an easy-access switch that turns on the router and a shop vacuum at the same time. The tall fence is perfect for attaching featherboards and supporting vertical work. Adams like this table so much, he’s built seven more of them for his students to use.


    A router table is indispensable for a wide range of tasks. Armed with a big, solid fence, it can cut joinery, raise panels, produce moldings, and even edge-joint boards. Take off the fence and the table can be used for pattern routing. I designed and built this router table years go, when I needed something fast and simple. I always figured I’d replace it some day with something nicer. But nearly 30 years later, the original table is still in use at my school, and we have built seven more just like it. That’s because the materials are affordable, the joinery is straightforward, the table is accurate, and it has all the features we require.

    First of all, it is large enough for all sorts of work and has a strong bracing underneath so it won’t sag. The base is heavy and solid, with two big shelves for storing bits and accessories. And a big switch, mounted on a front leg, turns on the router and a shop vacuum at the same time.

    router table fence
    The tall fence offers plenty of room for attaching featherboards, and ample support for vertical work, like routing sliding dovetails.

    But my favorite feature is the fence, which is tall, square, and strong, with a box built in for attaching a shop-vac hose for dust collection.

    Materials are affordable

    hollow legs for router table
    Glue and screw the L-brackets. After applying glue, Adams uses a pin or brad nailer to hold the parts in position. He then drills deep pilot holes, then clearance holes and countersinks in the top piece, before driving screws.

    The key to this table’s low price tag—around $200 for everything but the router—is MDF (medium-density fiberboard). Every part and piece is made from it. MDF is flat, durable, and somewhat heavy, which makes the table more stable. Its slick, hard surface is especially good for the tabletop; put a coat of wax on it and friction will be practically nonexistent. You’ll need roughly 1-1/2 (4×8) sheets of 3/4-in.-thick material for this project.

    How you attach the router is up to you. There are two main options: a router lift, with a router motor in it; or a simple table-insert plate with a router screwed to it. Whatever you choose, the plate should be 3/8 in. to 1/2 in. thick and made from a material like aluminum or phenolic that won’t sag from the weight of a big router. I went with the insert plate, attaching a router I already own, a more affordable approach than buying a lift.

    You’ll also need a simple plastic dust port designed for router fences, and some 1/4–20 threaded knobs and T-nuts for attaching the fence. If you don’t have a tool-triggered shop vacuum, I also recommend a double switch made for router tables, like the one we used (Kreg Multi-Purpose router Table Switch, $35).

    Start with the base

    The key to the base is how the legs are built. The fact that they are hollow, square columns allows you to chop up the inner sections to create notches for the shelves and support the internal bracing that prevents the top from sagging.

     

    Working-Class Router Table

    From Fine Woodworking #244

    To view the entire article, please click the View PDF button below.

    Sign up for eletters today and get the latest techniques and how-to from Fine Woodworking, plus special offers.

    Sign Up

    Get woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox

    Sign Up
    ×
    View FREE Project

    when you enter your email address below.

    Plus, get Fine Woodworking emails filled with plans, how-to, and special offers.

    or Log In

    Read our Privacy Policy
    Questions? Contact Customer Service

    View PDF
    X
    X
    Next: Stow-and-Go Router Table

    Guide

    Shop Projects

    Chapter

    Shop Helpers

    Log in or create an account to post a comment.

    Sign up Log in

    Shop Projects

    Shop Projects

    Everything you need to know to make your shop your own.

    View Project Guide

    View All Project Guides »

    Become a member and get unlimited site access, including the Shop Projects Project Guide.

    Start Free Trial

    Bench Jigs
    • An Overview
    • Shooting Boards
    • Holdfasts, Stops, and Other Helpers
    Machine Jigs and Fixtures
    • Tablesaw Jigs and Accessories
    • Bandsaw Jigs
    • Router Jigs
    • Planer Jigs
    Tool Storage
    • Open Storage
    • Wall Cabinets
    • Tool Chests
    Shop Storage
    • General Storage
    • Lumber Storage
    • Clamp Storage
    Workbenches
    • Starter Benches
    • Small Benches
    • Full-Size Benches
    Shop Helpers
    • Router Tables
    • Outfeed Tables
    • Work Supports and Helpers

    Get the latest from Fine Woodworking Magazine

    • #292-NOV/DEC 2021

      • Kerf-bent wall cabinet
      • Online extras from FWW issue #292
      • How to tame curved parts with patterns
    • #291-Sep/Oct 2021

      • Build a modern coffee table
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #291
      • Editor's Letter: Something old, something new
    • #290-July/Aug 2021

      • Build a Shaker chest of drawers
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #290
      • From the editor: What we make matters
    • #289-May/June 2021

      • Arts & Crafts Coffee Table with Story-Book Charm
      • Links from Fine Woodworking issue #289
      • Step-by-Step Guide to Tuning Your Block Plane
    • #288-Mar/Apr 2021

      • Phil Lowe: A craftsman and gentleman
      • Online Extras from FWW Issue #288
      • Phil Lowe: craftsman, teacher, friend

    UNLIMITED membership - Get access to it all

    Start Free Trial Upgrade Membership

    Fine WoodWorking

    Follow

    Newsletter

    Get woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox

    Sign Up

    Membership & Magazine

    • Members
    • Digital Libraries
    • Join Unlimited
    • Magazine Subscription
    • Magazine Renewal
    • Gift a Subscription
    • Customer Support
    • Manage Preferences

    Taunton Network

    • Fine Homebuilding
    • Green Building Advisor
    • Fine Gardening
    • Threads
    • About
    • Contact
    • Advertise
    • Privacy Policy
    • Careers
    • Copyright
    • Terms of Use
    • Accessibility
    • California Privacy Rights
    • Site Map

    © 2021 The Taunton Press, Inc. All rights reserved.

    Get step-by-step instructions, woodworking tips, expert advice and special offers in your inbox. Sign Up Now!

      Main Menu

    • Projects and Plans
    • How-To
    • Shop Tips
    • Tools & Materials
    • Videos
    • Gallery
    • Magazine
    • Video Workshops
    • Members
    • Forum

      Popular Topics

    • Design
    • Small Projects
    • Beds
    • Chairs, Benches And Stools
    • Built-ins
    • Storage And Shelves
    • Cabinets
    • Carving
    • Casework
    • Desks
    • Tables
    • Shop Storage And Furniture
    • Woodturning Projects
    • Workbenches
    • Surface Prep

      More

    • TV
    • Forum
    • Blogs
    • Webinars
    • Podcasts
    • Customer Support

      Account

    • Log In
    • Join

      Magazine

    • Current Issue
    • Past Issues
    • Digital Libraries
    • Magazine Index
    • Subscribe

      Membership

    • Member Home
    • Start Free Trial
    • Gift Unlimited
    • Log In

      Shop the Store

    • Books
    • DVDs
    • Taunton Workshops

      Events

    • Fine Woodworking Live
    • Fine Woodworking HANDS ON

      Account

    • Log In
    • Sign Up

    Newsletter

    Get woodworking tips, offers, and expert advice in your inbox

    Sign Up

    Follow

    UNLIMITED

    Become an UNLIMITED member and get it all: searchable online archive of every issue, how-to videos, Complete Illustrated Guide to Woodworking digital series, print magazine, e-newsletter, and more.

    Start Your Free Trial

    Upgrade Membership