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I had always wondered how to do this now I know
mogley98
Member Posts: 18,297 ✭✭✭✭
Why don't we go to school and work on the weekends and take the week off!
Comments
Be careful when you cut off the little piece with the miter saw. Those little buggers can fly across the work site and get lost quicker than a gun spring!
Margaret Thatcher
"There are three kinds of lies: lies, damned lies and statistics."
Mark Twain
I have been doing it that way for over 40 years.
A zero clearance fence on your saw will help greatly to keep the piece from flying all over the place.
Hint:
Use a hand powered mitre saw.
That?s mitre, not miter.
There's other ways that look just as good, are a lot less time consuming and doesn't leave a small piece to get dislodged through the years.
A way that Craftsmen finished that molding before the power mitre saw was invented?
But who wants to work with their hands and hand tools these days?
Yep. One of the first things my carpenter friend from high school taught me.
Hint:
Use a hand powered mitre saw.
That?s mitre, not miter.
I've got a 40+ year old Craftsman that I use often. With the blade properly sharpened and set it will cut nearly veneer thin.
quote:Originally posted by SCOUT5
There's other ways that look just as good, are a lot less time consuming and doesn't leave a small piece to get dislodged through the years.
A way that Craftsmen finished that molding before the power mitre saw was invented?
But who wants to work with their hands and hand tools these days?
I may be the only guy in the county that still has a rasp in his nail apron.
quote:Originally posted by iceracerx
quote:Originally posted by SCOUT5
There's other ways that look just as good, are a lot less time consuming and doesn't leave a small piece to get dislodged through the years.
A way that Craftsmen finished that molding before the power mitre saw was invented?
But who wants to work with their hands and hand tools these days?
I may be the only guy in the county that still has a rasp in his nail apron.
Not in my apron, but there is one in my tool bag.
quote:Originally posted by iceracerx
quote:Originally posted by SCOUT5
There's other ways that look just as good, are a lot less time consuming and doesn't leave a small piece to get dislodged through the years.
A way that Craftsmen finished that molding before the power mitre saw was invented?
But who wants to work with their hands and hand tools these days?
I may be the only guy in the county that still has a rasp in his nail apron.
Most people are familiar with the 'very' course rasp that works well with soft woods, but do you have a 'Cabinet Makers Rasp' who's teeth are about half as high as a 'standard' rasp? Works amazingly well on hard woods.
I tripped over one when my Wood Patten Maker/Model Maker father retired and brought his tools home. I was working as an Industrial Sculptor at the time, and that 'fine' rasp came in real handy at times.
http://www.nicholsontool.com/files/rasp