When cutting a board between 3.9"
When mitering to the right side of a base molding wider than 3.9"
CUTTING
VERTICALLY AGAINST THE FENCE
•Position molding as shown in Figure 22
•All cuts made with the back of the molding against the fence
INSIDE CORNER:
Left side
1.Position molding with bottom of molding against the base of the saw
2.Miter left 45°
3.Save left side of cut
Right side
1.Position molding with top of the molding resting on the base of the saw
2.Miter left 45°
3.Save left side of cut
OUTSIDE CORNER:
Left side
1.Position molding with bottom of molding against the base of the saw
2.Miter right 45°
3.Save left side of cut
Note: If the cut must be made somewhere other than
1" from the end of the molding: cut off the molding at 90° approx. 1" longer than your final length then make the miter cut as described above.
Right side
1.Position molding with bottom of the molding against the base of the saw
2.Miter left 45°
3.Save the right side of cut
A THIRD METHOD OF MAKING THE CUT NECESSARY IS TO MAKE A ZERO DEGREE MITER, 45 DEGREE BEVEL CUT. YOUR SAW CAN CUT A BEVEL
CUTTING BASE MOLDING LAYING FLAT AND USING THE BEVEL FEATURE
• All cuts made with the saw set at 45° bevel and 0 miter.
FIG. 26
FENCE
TABLE
CROWN MOLDING FLAT ON TABLE AND
AGAINST FENCE
| FIG. 26A |
BOTTOM SIDE |
|
OF MOLDING | DW 7054 CROWN |
| |
TOP SIDE OF | MOLDING FENCE |
| |
MOLDING | TABLE |
| |
FENCE |
|
CROWN MOLDING BETWEEN FENCE AND TABLE
•All cuts made with back of molding laying flat on the saw as shown in figures 23 and 24.
INSIDE CORNER:
Left side
1.Position molding with top of molding against the fence
2.Save left side of cut
Right side
1.Position molding with bottom of the molding against the fence
2.Save left side of cut
OUTSIDE CORNER:
Left side
1.Position molding with bottom of the molding against the fence
2.Save right side of cut
Right side
1.Position molding with top of molding against the fence
2.Save right side of cut
FIG. 27
English
BLADE
RIGHT
FENCE
FIG. 28
BLADE |
WRONG |
FENCE |
CUTTING CROWN MOLDING
Your miter saw is better suited to the task of cutting crown molding than any tool made. In order to fit prop- erly, crown molding must be compound mitered with extreme accuracy.
The two flat surfaces on a given piece of crown molding are at angles that, when added together, equal exactly 90 degrees. Most, but not all, crown molding has a top rear angle (the section that fits flat against the ceiling) of 52 degrees and a bottom rear angle (the part that fits flat against the wall) of 38 degrees.
Your miter saw has special
31.62degrees left and right for cutting crown molding at the proper angle. There is also a mark on the Bevel scale at 33.85 degrees.
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