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expiredcohiba posted Feb 08, 2024 04:13 PM
expiredcohiba posted Feb 08, 2024 04:13 PM

6-Piece Bosch 1/4" Carbide-Tipped Router Bits Assortment

+ Free Shipping

$60

$100

40% off
Amazon
29 Comments 19,357 Views
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Deal Details
Amazon has 6-Piece Bosch 1/4" Carbide-Tipped Router Bits Assortment (RBS006) for $59.95. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member cohiba for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Most popular profiles for straight, trimming, decorative edging, and dovetail joinery job applications
  • Premium-quality micrograin Carbide tips provide superior wear resistance, sharper edges, excellent smoothness and long life
  • Balanced and controlled cut design helps minimize kickback and allows smooth cuts with minimal vibration
  • Compact ball-bearing pilot guides bit along edge of material
  • Reusable storage case with a solid wood base and clear plastic top

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.8 from over 499 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Additional note:
    • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by cohiba
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Product Info
Community Notes
About the Poster
Amazon has 6-Piece Bosch 1/4" Carbide-Tipped Router Bits Assortment (RBS006) for $59.95. Shipping is free.

Thanks to Community Member cohiba for finding this deal.

Features:
  • Most popular profiles for straight, trimming, decorative edging, and dovetail joinery job applications
  • Premium-quality micrograin Carbide tips provide superior wear resistance, sharper edges, excellent smoothness and long life
  • Balanced and controlled cut design helps minimize kickback and allows smooth cuts with minimal vibration
  • Compact ball-bearing pilot guides bit along edge of material
  • Reusable storage case with a solid wood base and clear plastic top

Editor's Notes

Written by powerfuldoppler | Staff
  • About this product:
    • Rating of 4.8 from over 499 Amazon customer reviews.
  • About this store:
  • Additional note:
    • Please see original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by cohiba

Community Voting

Deal Score
+26
Good Deal
Visit Amazon

Price Intelligence

Model: BOSCH RBS006 1/4-Inch Shank Carbide-Tipped Multi-Purpose Router Bit Set, 6-Piece

Deal History 

Sort: Most Recent
Post Date Sold By Sale Price Activity
12/17/22Amazon$57 frontpage
10
11/25/22Amazon$67
2

Current Prices

Sort: Lowest to Highest | Last Updated 12/21/2025, 11:03 AM
Sold By Sale Price
Amazon$111.74

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Top Comments

NeatLadybug289
4 Posts
10 Reputation
imo, if you are looking at this and unsure if it's something you should buy, you probably shouldn't. It is a good price for carbide bits. But if you're like me when I was really new to woodworking and had no idea what to buy, the best advice I got was to buy a reasonably priced set and figure out what bits were useful to my woodworking. You'll have less buyer's remorse over a $2-3 bit after you figure out you prefer a 1/4" to a 1/2" roundover, or you didn't realize a spiral upcut bit is far superior to a straight bit for cutting mortises, etc.

I bought a 15-bit set from MLCS (now hvalleytools.com) that's going strong years later... there are several bits I've never used. or used very infrequently, and for the price they work fine. And it made it a lot easier to spend $50-100 for high-end carbide bits that cut like butter after I knew more about what I was buying.
cohiba
810 Posts
215 Reputation
Not to discount your experience, but following your same advice, I had the opposite experience. Buying a cheap 10 or 15 or 20 pc set (I bought at least 3 sets of different cheap brands, fwiw) was a complete waste of money. They worked so poorly that it almost put me off routing.

But I think we need to level set here. In the world of router bits, at around $10 each, you can call these Bosch bits nothing if not "reasonably priced". You can easily spend $50 to $100+ on a single spiral up-cut bit. In that context, your advice of purchasing reasonably priced bits of a few common profiles (ones that you will find a use for) is spot on, and *this* set would be a nearly ideal example.

Besides, unless someone does the same exact thing day in and day out, no one "prefers" a 1/2" roundover to a 1/4" roundover, they both have their place. Indeed, few will cut enough mortises to ever justify buying even a cheap up-cut bit. But almost anyone with a router will eventually want to make the shapes formed by this selection of bits in this set.

It may sound like I have a dog in this game... I don't. It may sound like I own a bunch of Bosch stock, I don't. I actually prefer Whiteside bits. But when I first started playing around with routing (only a few years ago, I will admit), it was *this* set that saved me from throwing the whole endeavor into the trash. And it is this set that I still often return to when I want to, for example, run a quick roundover on a piece of stock. You mileage may vary, this is just my $.02
labboypro
3814 Posts
2708 Reputation
Once.

28 Comments

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Feb 08, 2024 05:23 PM
71 Posts
Joined May 2015
CreteFeb 08, 2024 05:23 PM
71 Posts
These are quality at this price if you've picked up a trim router and want 1/4" shank bits, but definitely no more. I've never tried Bosch's other entry bit set (usually labeled as "professional") but they are significantly cheaper than these are. I'm pretty limited with my trim router usage, but for things that are just too big for the router table or in situations where it's just quicker to zip a profile on something at the bench, I've been happy with these. If anybody has experience with the Bosch Professional bits, I'd be curious to hear about their quality compared to these.

One thing that I will complain about is the flush trim bit in 1/4" shank with the bearing on the collet side of the bit. Never made sense to me, even in a table application I prefer to have it flipped so I can see what I'm bearing against.
Last edited by Crete February 8, 2024 at 11:27 AM.
Expert
This user is an Expert in Home & Home Improvement
Feb 08, 2024 05:47 PM
18,057 Posts
Joined Jun 2012
jeff34270
Expert
This user is an Expert in Home & Home Improvement
Feb 08, 2024 05:47 PM
18,057 Posts
Quote from cohiba :
Amazon says the "normal" price for these is only $72, but I paid $100 for this set a couple years ago, and many sites still sell this set for well over $100
$72 is not the normal price. The crossed out price on Amazon varies per item and you can see how it's derived by clicking the little "i" next to it. In this case, it's:
"...90-day median price paid by customers for the product on Amazon..."
2
Feb 08, 2024 10:07 PM
758 Posts
Joined Jul 2016
savebabysaveFeb 08, 2024 10:07 PM
758 Posts
Can I use it on metal? Harden Aluminum ?
1
Feb 08, 2024 11:06 PM
386 Posts
Joined Oct 2010
theyangsterFeb 08, 2024 11:06 PM
386 Posts
Picked up this set in Dec 2022 for $56 (pre-tax), used it a few times with Ryobi trim router, pretty good for the price, but not much frame of reference to others, I will tend to reach for these first vs the other sets I have.
Feb 09, 2024 12:25 AM
3,357 Posts
Joined Sep 2007
fewlioFeb 09, 2024 12:25 AM
3,357 Posts
looks like another seller on there sells it for 70 bucks or so...I'm sure it's a nice set but the price is a relatively small discount
Feb 09, 2024 12:40 AM
284 Posts
Joined Dec 2018
DavidP6348Feb 09, 2024 12:40 AM
284 Posts
Quote from savebabysave :
Can I use it on metal? Harden Aluminum ?
Sure, if you like carbide in your face.
2
Feb 09, 2024 01:07 AM
4 Posts
Joined Aug 2020
Roent_13Feb 09, 2024 01:07 AM
4 Posts
imo, if you are looking at this and unsure if it's something you should buy, you probably shouldn't. It is a good price for carbide bits. But if you're like me when I was really new to woodworking and had no idea what to buy, the best advice I got was to buy a reasonably priced set and figure out what bits were useful to my woodworking. You'll have less buyer's remorse over a $2-3 bit after you figure out you prefer a 1/4" to a 1/2" roundover, or you didn't realize a spiral upcut bit is far superior to a straight bit for cutting mortises, etc.

I bought a 15-bit set from MLCS (now hvalleytools.com) that's going strong years later... there are several bits I've never used. or used very infrequently, and for the price they work fine. And it made it a lot easier to spend $50-100 for high-end carbide bits that cut like butter after I knew more about what I was buying.

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Feb 09, 2024 01:26 AM
3,814 Posts
Joined Aug 2005
labboyproFeb 09, 2024 01:26 AM
3,814 Posts
Quote from savebabysave :
Can I use it on metal? Harden Aluminum ?
Once.
Feb 09, 2024 11:52 AM
5,251 Posts
Joined Jun 2015
jtree1Feb 09, 2024 11:52 AM
5,251 Posts
Price shows $59.95 now.
Feb 09, 2024 12:44 PM
1,147 Posts
Joined Mar 2005
mozillafirefixFeb 09, 2024 12:44 PM
1,147 Posts
This is a fair price for small bits like these. They got 15-piece set for $70 as well:

BOSCH RBS015MBS 15-Piece (Universally Compatible Accessory) Carbide-Tipped Wood Router Bit Assorted Set https://a.co/d/4Hij5m4
Original Poster
Feb 09, 2024 01:40 PM
810 Posts
Joined Dec 2006
cohiba
Original Poster
Feb 09, 2024 01:40 PM
810 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank cohiba

Quote from NeatLadybug289 :
imo, if you are looking at this and unsure if it's something you should buy, you probably shouldn't. It is a good price for carbide bits. But if you're like me when I was really new to woodworking and had no idea what to buy, the best advice I got was to buy a reasonably priced set and figure out what bits were useful to my woodworking. You'll have less buyer's remorse over a $2-3 bit after you figure out you prefer a 1/4" to a 1/2" roundover, or you didn't realize a spiral upcut bit is far superior to a straight bit for cutting mortises, etc.

I bought a 15-bit set from MLCS (now hvalleytools.com) that's going strong years later... there are several bits I've never used. or used very infrequently, and for the price they work fine. And it made it a lot easier to spend $50-100 for high-end carbide bits that cut like butter after I knew more about what I was buying.
Not to discount your experience, but following your same advice, I had the opposite experience. Buying a cheap 10 or 15 or 20 pc set (I bought at least 3 sets of different cheap brands, fwiw) was a complete waste of money. They worked so poorly that it almost put me off routing.

But I think we need to level set here. In the world of router bits, at around $10 each, you can call these Bosch bits nothing if not "reasonably priced". You can easily spend $50 to $100+ on a single spiral up-cut bit. In that context, your advice of purchasing reasonably priced bits of a few common profiles (ones that you will find a use for) is spot on, and *this* set would be a nearly ideal example.

Besides, unless someone does the same exact thing day in and day out, no one "prefers" a 1/2" roundover to a 1/4" roundover, they both have their place. Indeed, few will cut enough mortises to ever justify buying even a cheap up-cut bit. But almost anyone with a router will eventually want to make the shapes formed by this selection of bits in this set.

It may sound like I have a dog in this game... I don't. It may sound like I own a bunch of Bosch stock, I don't. I actually prefer Whiteside bits. But when I first started playing around with routing (only a few years ago, I will admit), it was *this* set that saved me from throwing the whole endeavor into the trash. And it is this set that I still often return to when I want to, for example, run a quick roundover on a piece of stock. You mileage may vary, this is just my $.02
2
Original Poster
Feb 09, 2024 01:47 PM
810 Posts
Joined Dec 2006
cohiba
Original Poster
Feb 09, 2024 01:47 PM
810 Posts
Quote from Crete :
These are quality at this price if you've picked up a trim router and want 1/4" shank bits, but definitely no more. I've never tried Bosch's other entry bit set (usually labeled as "professional") but they are significantly cheaper than these are. I'm pretty limited with my trim router usage, but for things that are just too big for the router table or in situations where it's just quicker to zip a profile on something at the bench, I've been happy with these. If anybody has experience with the Bosch Professional bits, I'd be curious to hear about their quality compared to these.

One thing that I will complain about is the flush trim bit in 1/4" shank with the bearing on the collet side of the bit. Never made sense to me, even in a table application I prefer to have it flipped so I can see what I'm bearing against.
I also find a top-bearing flush trim bit to be more useful for the way I work, but I've used both. It just depends on whether the reference surface is below or above your cut, right?
Feb 09, 2024 02:15 PM
53 Posts
Joined Jun 2020
housekat611Feb 09, 2024 02:15 PM
53 Posts
Bosch makes great tools but I would not trust these. When it comes to router bits you really get what you pay for. Ask any professional woodworker and they'll tell you there are 5 brands to pick from when it comes to router bits, in order - Whiteside, Infinity, Amana, Freud, CMT. Bits & Bits is fantastic with the additional coating they add but they source from Whiteside.

If you're a hobbyist and will only end up using it once or twice a year you can probably get away with cheaping out with a set like this but just know that cheap bits get dull really fast, or worse, are much more likely to break. I have a 2in 4 blade surfacing bit I bought from Whiteside about 5 years ago and have used it in my router sled to surface countless end-grain cutting boards, slabs, table tops, etc. It still cuts like a hot knife through butter and it has never once needed to be sharpened.
Feb 09, 2024 04:05 PM
1,174 Posts
Joined Jun 2006
DeadwingFeb 09, 2024 04:05 PM
1,174 Posts
Quote from labboypro :
Once.
And not for very long.

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Feb 09, 2024 04:29 PM
71 Posts
Joined May 2015
CreteFeb 09, 2024 04:29 PM
71 Posts
Quote from cohiba :
I also find a top-bearing flush trim bit to be more useful for the way I work, but I've used both. It just depends on whether the reference surface is below or above your cut, right?
Correct.

I found a Freud flush trim with a bearing on the top AND bottom, and use it almost more than anything else.

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