CC

[email protected] (Charles De Paola)

01/07/2005 6:37 AM

A question for you "Wood workers?

I have a shelf , its about 48" long & 8 to 10" wide, I want to it cut it
so it fits in a corner. I have a circular saw, Question: Is there
one cut I can make to fit it properly, if so at what angle? Or tell Me
what have to Do? Thanks, Charlie De Paola

Bee-Happy, Chardy Brown


This topic has 6 replies

Pn

Prometheus

in reply to [email protected] (Charles De Paola) on 01/07/2005 6:37 AM

02/07/2005 5:40 AM

On Fri, 1 Jul 2005 06:37:59 -0400, [email protected] (Charles De
Paola) wrote:

>I have a shelf , its about 48" long & 8 to 10" wide, I want to it cut it
>so it fits in a corner. I have a circular saw, Question: Is there
>one cut I can make to fit it properly, if so at what angle? Or tell Me
>what have to Do? Thanks, Charlie De Paola

Are you just trying to fit it snugly into the corner as one piece, or
are you making an L-shaped shelf to fit into that corner? If it's the
first, you have to measure that yourself. If it's the latter, cut a
45 degree angle where you need it on the board (IE, if you want half
of the shelf on each wall cut the 45 right in the center), and flip
one of the pieces over. (using one of those cheap triangle-style
framing squares with the lip on them as a guide for the circular saw
will help you get the angle right) Glue them back together (and maybe
use some of those miter bolts or biscuts, as it's gluing end grain to
end grain) and you've got a corner shelf with one cut.

Not sure if that's what you needed, but I hope it helps!


FC

Fly-by-Night CC

in reply to [email protected] (Charles De Paola) on 01/07/2005 6:37 AM

01/07/2005 9:30 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Ideally, you could use one more tool that most "woodworkers" own: a
> relatively inexpensive "bevel square", or adjustable, "t-square", which can
> be used to precisely duplicate the corner's angle on your shelf.
>
> Or, as Barry rightly suggests, trial and error with a cardboard pattern.

Right on. The corners I've fitted shelves into are very rarely square.
As a matter of fact, the 48" length of wall may not even be flat.
--
Owen Lowe
The Fly-by-Night Copper Company
__________

"I pledge allegiance to the flag of the
Corporate States of America and to the
Republicans for which it stands, one nation,
under debt, easily divisible, with liberty
and justice for oil."
- Wiley Miller, Non Sequitur, 1/24/05

Br

Ba r r y

in reply to [email protected] (Charles De Paola) on 01/07/2005 6:37 AM

01/07/2005 10:55 AM

On Fri, 1 Jul 2005 06:37:59 -0400, [email protected] (Charles De
Paola) wrote:

>I have a shelf , its about 48" long & 8 to 10" wide, I want to it cut it
>so it fits in a corner. I have a circular saw, Question: Is there
>one cut I can make to fit it properly, if so at what angle? Or tell Me
>what have to Do?

Make a full size cardboard mockup and use it as a pattern.

Barry

CC

[email protected] (Charles De Paola)

in reply to Ba r r y on 01/07/2005 10:55 AM

01/07/2005 9:32 AM

Thanks, Barry, Have a nice July 4th!!!! Charlie D

Bee-Happy, Chardy Brown

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to [email protected] (Charles De Paola) on 01/07/2005 6:37 AM

01/07/2005 7:47 AM


"Charles De Paola" wrote in message
> I have a shelf , its about 48" long & 8 to 10" wide, I want to it cut it
> so it fits in a corner. I have a circular saw, Question: Is there
> one cut I can make to fit it properly, if so at what angle? Or tell Me
> what have to Do? Thanks, Charlie De Paola

Ideally, you could use one more tool that most "woodworkers" own: a
relatively inexpensive "bevel square", or adjustable, "t-square", which can
be used to precisely duplicate the corner's angle on your shelf.

Or, as Barry rightly suggests, trial and error with a cardboard pattern.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 5/14/05

CC

[email protected] (Charles De Paola)

in reply to "Swingman" on 01/07/2005 7:47 AM

01/07/2005 9:35 AM

Thanks, Swingman!!!! Happy 4th! Charlie D

Bee-Happy, Chardy Brown


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