Power Feeder from Al Ladd, Little Proteus, $20–$270, Some assembly required. The power feeder comes in different kits, from just the plans to all the parts needed to assemble the complete feeder.
I’m a big fan of little power feeders. They can turn a router table into a small shaper, take the tedium out of ripping stock on the tablesaw, and allow a bandsaw to resaw without all the irregularities of feeding by hand. They also provide a big safety margin. The Little Proteus delivers all this and works excellently.
I was impressed with how accurately the feeder controlled stock. The tires are soft with lots of traction to keep the feed consistent, and the springs holding the tires to the material are stout. The feeder easily sets up anywhere you can mount a T-track, like at the top of a router or tablesaw fence. The bandsaw setup uses an attachment that clamps to the tabletop. The feeder can be angled too.
A drill drives the feeder. Instead of coming with a motor, the Little Proteus has you supply your own, a simple cordless, brushless hand drill, allowing for infinitely variable speed.
You can buy the Little Proteus in several different stages of completion, each requiring different levels of DIY. These start with a very basic kit; then there’s a complete hardware set and plans (you make the wooden parts). The final kit, the one I tested, includes everything except the motor, a brushless hand drill. Believe it or not, the drill works wonderfully.
I’ve been using small power feeders on my router tables for close to 20 years, and using them has revolutionized the quality of pretty much everything I do with a table-mounted router.
Quick answers to three quick questions about chipped router bits, bandsaw motor issues, and surface plates
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Regardless of the board’s grain, this jointer produced excellent results. Its fence was totally flat, worked smoothly, and locked well, staying in place even after jointing multiple edges. Getting the fence to 90° was very easy, but the 90° stop was a little tricky to set and the fence did not go back to square when using it. For those who would use it, there is also a digital depth-of-cut scale.
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