Dear Ryobi. Can u make a door jamb hinge installation jig, something I can C-clamp onto the door frame so we can hand router counter sink the door hinge to the door jamb. just like the door hinge jig you already have. Just a thought
The original presenter had COVID so they found this random guy at a university library that needed quick cash. Thats why he is so awkward using the router.
It was.. But due to the guide being too large he was hovering and attempting to adjust the depth literally "on the fly".. Looked like the cut was fairly irregular by my account. But in a thin board, probably his only choice. The correct way had been to secure it at the ends so the guide could fit
You tightened something with an Allen key but couldn’t see what! You put the guide but I had to keep rewinding to see which way. You said put it at the required depth but how am I supposed to know what that is? I give up, I think I’ll find a better video
This router is a steaming pile of hot garbage! And this comes from someone who has an entire tool set of Ryobi stuff. My other Ryobi tools I love, but after having this router for only a year and using it less than a handful of times, it started to fail. And by fail I mean it would suddenly plunge deeper in a cut. So I went back to the handbook and made sure I was setting everything correctly, and I was. What I realized was the pertinent piece that travels up and down the depth shaft is plastic. It needs to be metal. This is what is preventing mine from not having this failure. I know these are cheap and this might prohibit Ryobi from making this component metal, but it there ever was a component on this router that needs to be metal in order to have it work properly, this is that one. I'm currently look for a replacement router OUTSIDE the Ryobi family.
@@jeroen2082This comment is on many Ryobi how to videos. Idk if it's just someone who hates Ryobi or is legitimate. I have a Ryobi router that I've yet to use. But I'm going to be using it today so maybe I'll come back and report how it went. One thing, I haven't seen any other comment complaining about the same problem he presents so I suspect he is either trolling or has a problem unique to his router.
Of course. This guy is using a router for the first time.. The bit used first had it's own guide. Does not make sense to use external guide. Yes as pointed by @rickkern5785, second cut is piss-poor job. So much shaky inconsistent cut. Adjusting the bit depth to touch the wood is not even carpentry 101, but common sense. He's not going to make a joint at all out of that.
This guy is using a Trim Router for the first time...
😂😭
Dear Ryobi.
Can u make a door jamb hinge installation jig, something I can C-clamp onto the door frame so we can hand router counter sink the door hinge to the door jamb. just like the door hinge jig you already have. Just a thought
2:00
Woops! Upside down for a second there? First time?
The original presenter had COVID so they found this random guy at a university library that needed quick cash. Thats why he is so awkward using the router.
The second sample of his work he did not have the router base in contact with the wood. That can't be right.
It was.. But due to the guide being too large he was hovering and attempting to adjust the depth literally "on the fly".. Looked like the cut was fairly irregular by my account. But in a thin board, probably his only choice. The correct way had been to secure it at the ends so the guide could fit
would someone help me please .. where can i buy 6mm collet for Ryobi 18v +one router 1/4 in ?
You tightened something with an Allen key but couldn’t see what! You put the guide but I had to keep rewinding to see which way. You said put it at the required depth but how am I supposed to know what that is? I give up, I think I’ll find a better video
Why doesn’t it have an optional plunge function?
It's just an inexpensive little starter router is probably why. 🙂
This router is a steaming pile of hot garbage! And this comes from someone who has an entire tool set of Ryobi stuff. My other Ryobi tools I love, but after having this router for only a year and using it less than a handful of times, it started to fail. And by fail I mean it would suddenly plunge deeper in a cut. So I went back to the handbook and made sure I was setting everything correctly, and I was. What I realized was the pertinent piece that travels up and down the depth shaft is plastic. It needs to be metal. This is what is preventing mine from not having this failure. I know these are cheap and this might prohibit Ryobi from making this component metal, but it there ever was a component on this router that needs to be metal in order to have it work properly, this is that one. I'm currently look for a replacement router OUTSIDE the Ryobi family.
Have a look at the Einhell TP-RO 18 Set. It seems to be really good for the money.
@@jeroen2082This comment is on many Ryobi how to videos. Idk if it's just someone who hates Ryobi or is legitimate. I have a Ryobi router that I've yet to use. But I'm going to be using it today so maybe I'll come back and report how it went. One thing, I haven't seen any other comment complaining about the same problem he presents so I suspect he is either trolling or has a problem unique to his router.
Shame on no 8mm! My sets are not 6mm. Gets expensive if you need to buy two sets.
Ditch the music
Of course. This guy is using a router for the first time.. The bit used first had it's own guide. Does not make sense to use external guide.
Yes as pointed by @rickkern5785, second cut is piss-poor job. So much shaky inconsistent cut. Adjusting the bit depth to touch the wood is not even carpentry 101, but common sense.
He's not going to make a joint at all out of that.