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Porter Cable 690

15K views 28 replies 11 participants last post by  RainMan 2.0  
#1 ·
This was the shop router in the day..

Dewalt, Milwaukee, PC, Bosch,etc. In 2020 which brand was the routing leader in pro shop, home shop or in the carpentry field??
 
#3 ·
Well, other than the fact that they are no longer making the 690...yeah. I ended up sourcing one used, earlier this year, as that was what I wanted. I don't know what is currently considered the best available home shop router, have to wait for someone with more experience than me to reply.
 
#5 ·
I bought a 690LR (new) earlier this year, or sometime last year. It was on sale, $99.00. I never owned one, and it was a great price.
I didn't realize it was a single speed router. I bought a variable speed controller. I will probably use it when I build my horizontal slot mortiser. It will primarily be dedicated for that unit, as I have multiple routers: sizes, and brands.
All of the routers perform well, no real dislikes with any of them. It would be hard for me to choose, "an all around favorite". I try to be neutral and not sold on a specific brand. I like options!
It is unfortunate when you hear stories of customers needing replacement parts only to find that the unit is obsolete. weather it is a router, sander, planer, etc. I have been in that situation, as well as others.
 
#9 ·
I have an older pc690 and love it . Was heartbroken to here it was discontinued . I just bought bosches 1617 and like it better , but it’s also much larger .
Will probably be buying a second 1617 for table mounting also


I also have two brand new pc7518 motors only ,but never used them other to test .
Stick has a real hate on for them so I’ll probably be selling them . Actually had them sold once ,but was to lazy to ship them
 
#13 · (Edited)
PC at 13/4 is fine for anything out of the table. Because the route is 21/4 and variable I haven't found an advantage.

It sounds like they drop a little bigger hp and a variable speed in to sell it better. The Bosch 2 1/4 variable seems in between the Porter cable and a 3+ router would make more sense...

To me, the 690 at $99 holds a great value...at aditional cost the Bosch is a great router. But with wasted features. Like a sunroof or push button doors on a car...
 
#19 ·
The PC 690 was a work horse but they still have some at Lowes. The PC 890 is not available anywhere I can find. I have a PC 690 but my old one burned up by using a speed control. I think that Porter Cable being owned by Black and Decker has decided to consolidate their product offerings and the venerable PC is out. I cannot remember the model but the big 3hp one is still available in places but if you want a PC you better get it while you can.
 
#23 ·
My original name in the 80's was "WoodArt". But by the time I got around to writing off a business I notice an Australian shop called WoodArt and changed it to Rebelwork Woodworking. When I opened a shop fulltime, there was concern about the name so I changed it to Jack Duren Cabinets...When I shut it down after a few years I went back to Rebelwork Woodworking...
 
#25 ·
While trying to find a new 7518 for our shop, it appears that Porter Cable will no longer be making any routers.

I think I have three 690's, a 7518 and an 892 from when they were first released. The older ones are certainly better than the newer ones. I really like the 892

Our shop has about twenty 690's, most being 10-15 years old or older. They last forever.

If you want a 690 replacement, I'd look at Bosch, Makita, or Milwaukee. I think where the 690 had a huge advantage, was in the collets, and their guide bushings, which are (were) the industry standard.
A tougher question to answer is what will replace the 7518? Milwaukee makes the only other fixed base 3+HP router, and they are sold out for at least another month, probably due to the lack of 7518's.
 
#26 · (Edited)
Its not that there arent other replacements for PC, it's the cost. It was the reasonably cost products that had people lining up for more.

There were other routers, just s few dollars more.

Every cabinet shop on the mid-west was using PC routers. PC sanders and Bosch jigsaws. If you changed jobs you pretty much were using this combo..