vanderpooch
Member
- Joined
- May 7, 2007
- Messages
- 52
Eiji,
What's that big ass speed square looking thing?
Hey, check your email, too...
- kIt
What's that big ass speed square looking thing?
Hey, check your email, too...
- kIt
verl said:Wow Thanks for the great pictures. Is the TS75 very hard to control when it is tilted for a bevel like that? I'm on the fence right now trying to decide on a TS55 or TS75
tjbnwi said:If you read my first post I stated that I would be in awe.
I must admit I was wrong this is so far beyond awe I do not know what to say impeccable.
Now I must contemplate whether my daughter needs a collage education.
Tom
PS I may have to leave this site except as a lurker for couple of years.
Eiji Fuller said:I almost forgot about the garage door column and beam.
The beam is a little over 18' long and it is mitered. Take a look at the middle of the beam to see the splice used to make two 12 footers into one 18 footer. Only with the TS75 of 55 can you do this.
The existing garage door will be replaced to match the trim work.
Dave Ronyak said:Where is the splice in the garage beam?
Dave Ronyak said:I cannot see it in the photo you posted.
Dave R.
Dave Ronyak said:Eiji,
OK, what is the direction of the splice? From lower left to upper right?
yes
I'm guessing your splice was not the usual scarfing cut used by carpenters in the past, and that the splice you made involved longer, shallow angle beveled cuts together with careful grain matching. There are two 30 ft long beams (doubled up 2x16s or 2 x 18s) holding up the ceiling in a room of my house, ~27 ft of each is covered with oak boards, using scarf cuts, no grain matching. This was built >20 years ago, long before I became owner.
to cut the splice I lay out the boards overlapped at the middle, that way I can see what the grain is doing. I make adjustment if necessary by flipping the boards around until I get the best match. I then lay a guide rail over the overlapped section at an angle that maximizes the splice length. cut through both peices with the TS saw. Remove the cutoffs and lay the cuts together. Every time I have done this I have gotten movement in the wood so a jointing cut is necessary. Domino/glue/clamp/sand the joint. the coolest part is that I did the same thing on the bottom part of the beam and when mitered together it looks like a solid beam that has scarf/splice.
Dave R.