Zeddedhed
Established Member
I'd be interested to hear peoples opinions regarding the fitting of skirting boards - specifically the joining at internal corners.
I've heard a lot of (younger) chippies recently complaining that when using deep skirting boards and fitting to a corner that is out of square (over 90 degs internally) they cannot use their mitre saws to cut, say, a 48 deg angle. Standing the board up they can't get the depth of cut. Laying the board down doesn't help because few saws tilt beyond 45 degs.
Personally I was taught to always scribe profiled skirtings at an internal corner, and generally do this by hand. Out of square corners therefore never really present an issue to me.
Am I being extremely old fashioned in the way I fit skirtings?
Are carpenters these days not taught how to scribe?
Opinions please.
I've heard a lot of (younger) chippies recently complaining that when using deep skirting boards and fitting to a corner that is out of square (over 90 degs internally) they cannot use their mitre saws to cut, say, a 48 deg angle. Standing the board up they can't get the depth of cut. Laying the board down doesn't help because few saws tilt beyond 45 degs.
Personally I was taught to always scribe profiled skirtings at an internal corner, and generally do this by hand. Out of square corners therefore never really present an issue to me.
Am I being extremely old fashioned in the way I fit skirtings?
Are carpenters these days not taught how to scribe?
Opinions please.