This may seem a basic question but the answer eludes me. I want to rip
a piece of crown moulding on my table saw to narrow it but I want to
retain the same 52 degree slope angle (or bevel). Notwithstanging that
I can't bevel my craftsman saw to even 45 degrees, how do I get to
bevel this moulding to 52 dgrees?
Thanks for any help.
Rocky
> Complementary angles are your friends. Learn to think in those terms
> and all kinds of good solutions will present themselves to you in the
> future.
>
> Bob gave you the specific answer, but you'll run into this often
> enough in the shop that you'll want to study on the concept so you can
> adapt it to other problems.
>
> For example, say you need to put a nice 160 degree angle on the end of
> your pointy stick. How do you do that on your miter saw? Can't turn
> the table to 80 degrees.
>
> Just put a 90 degree block on the table, turn the saw to 10 degrees,
> place the stick against the block, perpendicular to the fence and
> slice away. Flip the stick over and cut the other half of the point.
> Voila! 160 degree point.
>
> --
> LRod
Thanks to all who responded. The help is appreciated.
I have tried the using an angled block as a jig on my miter saw to get
angles greater than 45 degrees and it works. It does make for some
interesting challenges to hold the stock while cutting however.
On 28 Aug 2006 18:03:08 -0700, "Rocky" <[email protected]> wrote:
>This may seem a basic question but the answer eludes me. I want to rip
>a piece of crown moulding on my table saw to narrow it but I want to
>retain the same 52 degree slope angle (or bevel). Notwithstanging that
>I can't bevel my craftsman saw to even 45 degrees, how do I get to
>bevel this moulding to 52 dgrees?
Complementary angles are your friends. Learn to think in those terms
and all kinds of good solutions will present themselves to you in the
future.
Bob gave you the specific answer, but you'll run into this often
enough in the shop that you'll want to study on the concept so you can
adapt it to other problems.
For example, say you need to put a nice 160 degree angle on the end of
your pointy stick. How do you do that on your miter saw? Can't turn
the table to 80 degrees.
Just put a 90 degree block on the table, turn the saw to 10 degrees,
place the stick against the block, perpendicular to the fence and
slice away. Flip the stick over and cut the other half of the point.
Voila! 160 degree point.
--
LRod
Master Woodbutcher and seasoned termite
Shamelessly whoring my website since 1999
http://www.woodbutcher.net
Proud participant of rec.woodworking since February, 1997
email addy de-spam-ified due to 1,000 spams per month.
If you can't figure out how to use it, I probably wouldn't
care to correspond with you anyway.
Stand the board on edge and rip at 38 degrees.
"Rocky" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This may seem a basic question but the answer eludes me. I want to rip
> a piece of crown moulding on my table saw to narrow it but I want to
> retain the same 52 degree slope angle (or bevel). Notwithstanging that
> I can't bevel my craftsman saw to even 45 degrees, how do I get to
> bevel this moulding to 52 dgrees?
>
> Thanks for any help.
>
> Rocky
>