This has probably been discussed before, but I haven't found the answer to my question.
I can miter (with some difficulty)
regular inner corners
(Roof side down 45 degrees in miter saw)
Regular outer corners
(Roof side down 45 degrees in miter saw from the other direction)
Slanted roof without corners
(Roof side up in the saw, divide the roof angle by 2)
But slanted roof with corners. How do you do it? Firstly, the molding is not designed for slanted roofs but for a 90-degree angle. I was thinking of planing the back of the molding to get the profile down against the wall and ceiling to solve this.
Right now, I'm so frustrated that I'm considering mitering like a regular inner corner and placing the molding lower on the wall according to the picture so it fits, but maybe that will look odd?
Thanks for the response, but the plane only solves the problem of getting the list smooth against the wall. It's the angle and cutting technique I can't figure out (höhö).
Aha! I realized the obvious and stepped out into the attic space of our current 1940s house (not the one currently being built) and there was the answer. I'm sending in a picture of how it can be done for those who have the same question I had.
Aha! Jag kom på det självklara och stegade ut i kattvinden på vårt nuvarande 40-tals hus (inte det som byggs för tillfället) och där var facit. Jag skickar in en bild på hur man kan göra för de som har samma fundering jag hade.
[image]
snyggt. Kan du beskriva mer hur du gjorde med vinklar mm? jag håller på med samma och märkt att det inte fungerar att gira direkt.
För de vanliga fallen beskrev jag längre upp. För snedtaksdelen gjorde jag inte som jag fotade i kattvinden utan det blev en massa hyvlande innan det såg ok ut.
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