Dave,
I was recently on a job where the stone masons had installed flagstone up a wall to the corners. The owner's then decided to add car siding to the adjascent walls. After looking at scribing about 50lf of trim, 25 vertical on each side of the fireplace, it was decided that the best coarse of action would be to have the masons use their grinders to score a shallow line the depth of the siding, and manually clean out the groove, thus allowing the wood siging to be tucked into the stone.
It wasn't as messy as one might think. You could even mitigate the dust further by use of additional vacs, zipwall, even a small bit of water. Whatever may work for your circumstance.
Having completed many, many lf. of scribing against all materials, I've learned it's sometimes best to look at all sides and maybe a straight line is the best path.
Dan
I was recently on a job where the stone masons had installed flagstone up a wall to the corners. The owner's then decided to add car siding to the adjascent walls. After looking at scribing about 50lf of trim, 25 vertical on each side of the fireplace, it was decided that the best coarse of action would be to have the masons use their grinders to score a shallow line the depth of the siding, and manually clean out the groove, thus allowing the wood siging to be tucked into the stone.
It wasn't as messy as one might think. You could even mitigate the dust further by use of additional vacs, zipwall, even a small bit of water. Whatever may work for your circumstance.
Having completed many, many lf. of scribing against all materials, I've learned it's sometimes best to look at all sides and maybe a straight line is the best path.
Dan