sharp corners

Rembo

Member
Joined
Jan 7, 2012
Messages
280
It took gash sharp corners. Cap made ​​a template.
that came out of it, to judge you.
 
Rembo...I like your shop heating!!!

Also...great job with the jig!  Very inventive!

Bob
 
Cool little jig Rembo.  What is that in the last pic, is it a staircase ? Any more pics of it !
 
think theres another shot of it in dom xl thread woodguy. on a side note i picked a copy of probuilder up for you this week
 
woodguy7 said:
Cool little jig Rembo.  What is that in the last pic, is it a staircase ? Any more pics of it !
Yes, this ladder. Here are some photos
 
So I gather that fixture performs the functionality of the Festool Symetric saw?  I like it!  Must build on to go n my Kapex when I need that type of cutting.

Seth
 
thats a great looking jig. youv got some great ideas.

i have done something similar in the past. i cut a 45deg  9x1 and screwed it to a bit of ply. then set the angle to 90deg-angle needed -45. so if you wanted a 30 degree. it would be (90-30)-45 =15

works great but the jig gets ruined as you change the angle
 
I was waiting for this issue ..
zapilovki principle of two bases has long been known.
regard simetriki from Festool, then show me the clamps and a protractor, which is based in the wake of the blade?
 
my dealer was trying to sell me one of those festool saws. i would have bought it only it wouldnt cut a 150mm skirting
 
Alan m said:
thats a great looking jig. youv got some great ideas.

i have done something similar in the past. i cut a 45deg   9x1 and screwed it to a bit of ply. then set the angle to 90deg-angle needed -45. so if you wanted a 30 degree. it would be (90-30)-45 =15

works great but the jig gets ruined as you change the angle
I do not see any reason to cut corners on the template, 45 and 15 degrees. this can be done without it.
 
i made a jig out of a bit of a 9x1 timber and screwed it to a piece of ply. this allow the stock to be held accuratly at 45 while the saw was turned to the rest of the angle.

i must build one like yours  as yours leaves the blade in the same place . mine got cut up on different angles and was ruined
 
I missed this the first time through; love the jig and the project.  Excellent work, Rembo.  Thanks for posting the follow-up pictures.
 
great idea. not sure i like the just holding a stick in there to hold it idea . maybe if you had a pin in the table out of the cut area , you could use it as a pivot point to gain leverage . i must move this up my list of jigs to make.
 
I once saw I really good way to make those small pyramid shapes on the New Yankee Workshop.  Norm had a strip of wood the same height as the blocks.  Let's say the blocks were 70mm x 70mm.  He had a strip of wood about 1m long 70mm high x 20mm thick.  He cut all the blocks square, 70 x 70 then put a screw in at the end on the long strip exactly into the centre of the underside of the block.
The table saw blade was set to the desired angle then the long strip with the block attached was pushed through the blade.  Pull it back, rotate the block 90deg & push through again.  Repeat until all 4 sides are cut.
Really quick & safe.

Did that make any sense ?
 
woodguy7 said:
Did that make any sense ?

With that accent no one can figure out what you're saying... [big grin] sorry couldn't resist.

Tim

Yes Alan it makes perfect sense to me.
 
Back
Top