eLuSiVeMiTe
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Missed that. was too busy thinking you must be a mug to cut skirting by hand.And use a " back saw " aka fine toothed tenon or short fine toothed saw 14 to 18 tpi to cut it not a panel saw .
Missed that. was too busy thinking you must be a mug to cut skirting by hand.And use a " back saw " aka fine toothed tenon or short fine toothed saw 14 to 18 tpi to cut it not a panel saw .
Correct I always use the above method for internal corners, only use mitres for external corners...The way that appears to be taught as Daed says is to cut a profile on one and the other square.
Festool by any chance?I'm converted to the gadget solution now, i got a angle finder included with my chopsaw it hides away in a slot in the base. totally ignored it until it fell out moving it. Took a look and the penny dropped, you bend it around the angle you want then push the fingers in and line the cop saw laser (or blade) to a dotted line along the gadget. I use it for loads of stuff now absolute genius :-)
Festool by any chance?
Interested to see.Ill show you the easy way tomorrow. Using just a bevel
Pic of the finished item to follow
Often a good idea is prime the bottom and back of the skirting before you fix it,in fact prime the whole lot before you cut,i see tiles? Kitchen/bathroom perhaps?
Mine came with the real deal... nobex champion saw in the days before Eric trickery was born. .. early 90,s still works a treat. Festool now supply a similar tool with their chop sawsI bought a similar gizmo ex Banggood iirc, I've used it once I think but it did the marking out job without me doing mental gymnastics [lazy, me]