First you dirt bag country and now you’re smack talkin pencils. That ain’t right I tell ya but that is how I scribe my transition pieces to notch them to fit. Works great.Pencils suck
First you dirt bag country and now you’re smack talkin pencils. That ain’t right I tell ya but that is how I scribe my transition pieces to notch them to fit. Works great.Pencils suck
Solid advice. I had to re-read it a couple times, mainly because it takes a minute for my brain to start firing correctly in the morning. That seems like it should be fairly simple. I may give this method a shot and not worry about cutting any more from the jambs. Thanks for the advice.I've been editing my comments so you might want to read them again. Sometimes it's hard to make things clear.
And when you cut out that little notch it's usually best to stop your cut before the two lines intersect. You can usually wiggle that piece out and break it off if you're careful. All those door trims are slightly rounded on the edges. You can use a triangle file to finish performing the corner where there's two lines intersect on your molding. If you cut it square, point to point, you have a tiny gap.
If you've already cut one piece and have a scrap that's too small and of no use, use that as a test piece to see how close you can make it fit. It's always better to do a trial run with a scrap piece.
I use the microphone on my Android to do most of my typing.Solid advice. I had to re-read it a couple times, mainly because it takes a minute for my brain to start firing correctly in the morning. That seems like it should be fairly simple. I may give this method a shot and not worry about cutting any more from the jambs. Thanks for the advice.
Ha. Yeah, that's why I don't even bother with the voice capture stuff. Sometimes if you speak really slowly and clearly it works great. I know it doesn't work so great with a Southern accent. Even when you think you are talking clear, it will change the word to something totally different. Way too frustrating for me personally. It sure would be nice and convenient if it were a little more accurate. I laugh at my Mom, because she has the voice capture feature on her car radio, and she ends up very frustrated when it won't work for her. I tell her, you could have dialed and been talking by now instead of arguing with the radio. LolI use the microphone on my Android to do most of my typing.
For some reason on this website, when I speak into the microphone and the words are printed out, everything looks fine. When I post my comment and look at it I can't even tell what I was trying to say sometimes. My phone is evil, it hates me.
So anyway as I reread my comment I see a wrong word or two wrong words that have nothing to do with what I was talking about and I correct them..... Then I find another.
I'm thinking it might be easier to just type them than go back and do the corrections.
So funny just watching that guy on TV that was Indian and he was talking about how Siri does not like accents.I agree, Google and Siri are no better.
You can make a very accurate template using poster board. Rough cut a notch in a piece of poster board so it fits around a door casing. Relatively close, is good enough. Tape the posterboatd to the floor so it can't move.Highup, I figured you would have to make sure they are lined up perfectly-- which is why you would probably want to make a template of some sort but the tool could help with transferring marks to a template if you use it correctly. But yeah, undercutting seems like the best option.