Also, I never do "quick dirty and cheap" Zero gaps and minimal caulking are the marks of a good craftsman, no matter the pay.
morts10n said:Again, not sure where you are going, but I work for top notch clients, am heavily invested in Festool, and get paid well for craftsmanship that satisfies the most discriminating tastes
Cheese said:I like that...that’s a great answer. [smile]
It restores some of my faith for those that are in the commercial end of the business.
The “good enough” attitude is exactly what made me give up on commercial installers/fabricators/ craft people and take care of business myself.
That was the one method available to me where I could directly control the quality of the finished installation without threatening law suits, cancelled checks or calls to the Better Business Bureau.
StanB said:I used the uscribe jig to do this fit out in my basement. Works great.
StanB said:I used the uscribe jig to do this fit out in my basement. Works great.
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xedos said:It's a european cabinet installer's wet dream for fillers, soffits, and flush toekick.
For the general carpenter or framed cabinet guy - it's just a collector's item.
n.b - you must match the ( thickness in mm ) of your scribe material exactly to the jig - or you will be disappointed.
Lincoln said:I bought two sets over the xmas break and got a chance to use them on an install last week - very, very handy. One thing I learnt - leave your scribe line on, plane or cut etc right up to it, but leave the line there. As [member=67935]xedos[/member] mentioned, match your scribe block exactly...but still leave the line on.
I'll be using them all the time now.
Distinctive Interiors said:I have the 18mm and the 16mm U Scribe jig sets. I fit both British and European cabinets, so do use both sizes.
Very useful, especially for tall fillers and when scribing long lengths of material.....
These are the ones for 16mm cabinet material....The kitchen is German.
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ben_r_ said:Yea that doesnt make sense to me either. I thought most people scribed with something like this: LINK or LINK
That said, something like that U-Scribe looks CRAZY easy to 3D print. Give me some dimensions for it and I could slap together a 3D model and throw it up on Thingiverse in 20 minutes for ya!
Rob Z said:Hi Matt
For the project that you showed to me recently, I think you will be able to scribe it with just a compass. HD used to sell General brand compasses and they were inexpensive and easy to modify as needed. I don't know if HD still has them but if not I can give one to you.
usernumber1 said:interesing, i had questions but then i found
i can see not special for toekicks or shorter side pieces. but the long stuff or ceiling .... yea
threesixright said:Its has to be me. But after watching I still don’t understand how this is supposed work. Guessing someone installing this, probable will.
Anyway, for the noobs, some closeups of what it actually does, might be handy! I do understand it helps for scribing. But thats more the name of jig then the video.
Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk
Alan m said:basically all it does is to hold the filler piece solid while you use some other tool to scribe the line. if you use it so the filler is aligned witht eh edge of the cabinet then you can use a piece of the cabinet material to scribe rather than a variable compas or other adjustable scribe tool
Again, not sure where you are going, but I work for top notch clients, am heavily invested in Festool, and get paid well for craftsmanship that satisfies the most discriminating tastes
The “good enough” attitude is exactly what made me give up on commercial installers/fabricators/ craft people and take care of business myself.
Whoever said, "Good enough isn't" was right!