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Posted
5 hours ago, Scrappile said:

Very well cut and finished. It looks like you have mastered the perfect 45° cut.  I am still working on that.

Paul, I set up a jig for my 45 degree cuts on frames and it works great. I used a metal ruler to make a 90 degree angle on a flat panel with the saw blade running 45 degrees to the ruler. The ruler on the right is marked in inches. I make the first cut on the left side to get my first angle and then move it to the right side to cut the second angle to length. What's nice is I can use the recess from the framing material to butt up against the ruler and can cut it at the actual length of the piece I plan to use it for. Another words, I don't have to figure the quarter inch or so when making the cut. Really, really simple. I've also made a jig to cut the splines. This one fits over the table saw fence and slides back and forth. I can raise or lower the blade on the saw to make the spline as deep or shallow as I want. I simply rip strips to fit the blade cerf. If the strips are slightly too thick, I'll sand them down until they fit snug then glue them in.

Posted
2 hours ago, Dak0ta52 said:

Paul, I set up a jig for my 45 degree cuts on frames and it works great. I used a metal ruler to make a 90 degree angle on a flat panel with the saw blade running 45 degrees to the ruler. The ruler on the right is marked in inches. I make the first cut on the left side to get my first angle and then move it to the right side to cut the second angle to length. What's nice is I can use the recess from the framing material to butt up against the ruler and can cut it at the actual length of the piece I plan to use it for. Another words, I don't have to figure the quarter inch or so when making the cut. Really, really simple. I've also made a jig to cut the splines. This one fits over the table saw fence and slides back and forth. I can raise or lower the blade on the saw to make the spline as deep or shallow as I want. I simply rip strips to fit the blade cerf. If the strips are slightly too thick, I'll sand them down until they fit snug then glue them in.

I'm sorry, you what?  Got a picture of your jig?  It may help me.    I have a spline jig that works fine.  I also have a 45° cutting jig, but I have never been able to get it perfected.

B08E6281-7149-47F6-A370-150D1F7B26C8.jpeg

Posted
On 5/7/2025 at 6:33 PM, Scrappile said:

I'm sorry, you what?  Got a picture of your jig?  It may help me.    I have a spline jig that works fine.  I also have a 45° cutting jig, but I have never been able to get it perfected.

B08E6281-7149-47F6-A370-150D1F7B26C8.jpeg

I'll take some pics this weekend so you can better understand. The picture you have above could actually work. The only difference is where you have the plywood on top of your sled, I use the metal ruler. The ruler is thin enough to allow for the notch in the framing material to ride against thus not having to calculate the difference to allow for the notch. The length of the ruler on the right would have the measurements so you can cut the frame to length. When you make your measurement cut, you have to measure at the point where the framing material notch falls on the ruler. May sound confusing but it's really simple. The pics I'll send will make it clear.

 

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