Tr

Topaz

26/04/2009 11:19 PM

Method for compound angles on a miter saw

Since I want to mke a carrying box for my small gardening tools (and
cannot justify a Sussex trug for this) I plan to make a sort-of
shallow planter ,or butler's tray, with a central handle.
Their corners got me interested in compound angles - and I was hooked.
I found a post in this group writen by Elmer Gilman in 2000 where he
describes a procedure to make compound angles (such as at the ridge
end of a hip rafter) using a miter saw, NOT an (S)CMS.
Ref:
http://groups.google.be/groups/search?hl=nl&scoring=d&enc_author=FICrAxIAAABedJJuvGdinUkfSQXu0zh08rhlH0Pnl47z4AZhN98BFg&sa=N&start=20

I hope it is not a joke, because I do not understand it. I quote a
bit:

" on a 4/12 hip roof the saw angle is 22.5 degrees . . . and place the
crown
side against the fence ( this will be the top edge of the rafter)
pivot the
bottom of the rafter (the edge facing you) up towards the fence
keeping your
finger behind it when you make contact with the fence. set the saw to
22.5
degrees and cut the board. You now have a perfect 4/12 . . . hip
rafter prow cut. "
Unquote.
Can anyone explain that finger bit ?
Sounds, well . . .

Thanks