For me, the ideas in ru-vid.comUgkxy_pn55PK60wAV3X_C_RoLS_67mNonoCE Plans were a starting point for building different sheds . Ryan gives ideas that allow an individual to draw nicest conclusions into the design and building of his or her own shed.
Thank you for this video. You have saved me so much work and time. I had no idea at all how to do this and I have more than 50 bullnose corners to do. Subscribing now!
Going to be installing plank flooring and baseboard in our cabin this summer and I run the saw while my husband measures and lays it in. Your videos will make this whole project go soooo much smoother. I'm a new woodworker myself, I'm building the cabinets. doors and drawers for the kitchen as well as other furniture, and I've learned more from your youtube videos than the hundreds of other videos I've watched! I enjoy the whole process but now I will feel so much more confident! I wanted to suggest you do a video on compound miter cuts. Those still throw me, when do I cut it face to the fence, upside down, etc.
Wow & wow,i am a try to do it all myself & i completely redid my house,new walls everything and i put bullnose(round) corners on every wall and for 3 years no baseboard because i did not know how to do it.So patience has rewarded me,i so much appreciate your video man,i hope my comments make you smile because you put a mile long smile on my face,thank you from the bottom of my heart man!
Yes, I would use CA glue with an activator. Make sure you fit the piece first then shoot it on the sides. The trim will crack if you shoot small pieces, but that glue is very strong.
I just did this the other day with some stain grade, I wish I would have watched this video first. You only needed two cuts with no waste. Very efficient.
Great video. Now if only my walls were truly 90 degrees. If they were I would hardly even need caulk. Like they say, do your best, caulk the rest. Thanks Chris
The saw blade is 1/8 inch thick. To make it a perfect cut are you cutting directly on top on of mark or are you cutting just to the right or left of each angled mark that you made? Respectfully submitted.
Depends on your saw and the blade you use. Mark a few pieces up and cut samples, varying where your blade is placed relative to the line. Goal: cut the piece as close to your marks as possible with the end result being a bull nose with the tapered dimension = 5/8”
Great work! What do you do to clean up the lines in the baseboard made by the corner piece? Obviously after gluing you sand and paint? Do you calk the corner piece to make it look as one?
Thank you, very helpful to see a bigger sample. In an attempt to save time for trial and error, which side of the saw would you use for the two sides, not the center piece so they fit together?
Your videos are great! In another you subtract the angle from 90. In this one it seems to be straight 22.5 (not subtracted from 90) what’s the difference?
This is helpful. Cutting corners in Granite Bullnose is a challenge for a small kitchen job for a DIYer without spending $400 to $1,000 for a wet tile saw that can cut a 45 Angle with sufficient depth 1.25" being std "stated" material cut capability on the $150 - $400 wet saws with a 7' blade. ( not impressive for a 7" circular blade ). It's just too much $ for a one time job, and NO ONE is willing to do 4 to 6 cuts. I had one quote of $250 "set-up" + "well see" per cut cost, for 4x 45 degree butt joint cuts on 1" Granite. I want to do them as vertical 45's, because the Bullnose I am using is a complex curve S ( for laymen other than the Channel owner, this means getting an "outside" corner ( counter edge ) to match precisely and cleanly is both unlikely, and, twice as hard ( 2x 45's = one joint. 4x 22.5's = two joints. Hence, double the potential for misalignment, in a VERY visible location ). 22.5's would also mean cutting the counter Granite, or in my case specialized ceramic tile, and the entire corner to a precise 45 isosceles triangle at the perfect depth to match the inner edge dimension of the Granite Bullnose. Yet another feat of significant challenge. Much of this transcends simple measurements, and crosses into Art and Skill. Just last night I decided to ditch the wet table saw method, and do it on a sliding / bevel miter saw. Both Home Depot and Lowes have models under $200. They are not wet, but nothing prevents manual lubrication of the blade via a squirt bottle / oil can. A miter saw approach is decidedly "less safe" but the name of the game is "Safety FIRST, Safety FIRST, Safety FIRST" Then as always, "Measure Twice, cut once". The expert experience and guidance that I had not considered was, cutting the material VERTICAL instead of on it's side. I'll be trying it this weekend. Thanks for the VIDEO !!! Cheers
For standard 3/4" radius bullnose, the small piece of baseboard is always 5/8" *across the inside face*. A trim gauge like the Benchdog 10-030 makes it easy to determine where to terminate the long pieces, to accommodate the 5/8" small piece
Would the baseboard have to be cut from the back side? looks like after wards once you have em joined together the numbers you have written down, 22.5 are flipped.
You can cut it from the back but the only reason he flipped the pieces was for convenience because they are square. In practice you would have your 5/8” bullnose position marked on the wall, then mock-up the left- and right-side pieces, mark where to cut them based on your 5/8” marks on the wall, then cut each side at 22.5 degrees and piece it together.
Most bullnose corners are 5/8. So I just used it for instructional purposes. Just measure the length of your corner and adjust for that. Thanks for watching. Please ask anymore questions. Thanks
Good video. I was wondering about the bull-nose cut of 5/8's. Did you use a 90° angle to help measure your point to point to get your 5/8's? I would have liked to see how you did that one. Darn, I cannot even point out any math mistakes on this video. Thank you for the info, Chris! :P
The measurement of the round corner in a 90 degree angle wall or “bullnose wall” is either gonna be 5/8’s or 3/4’s. Which ever the measurement, it’s the same process. 22.5 degree cuts on everything
??? when you cut the wood , it was only two cuts? You got both sides and the bullnose to fit right. I usually have to cut a bull nose then go back and try and remember how to cut the sides. So this will work great in small areas. OH my gosh i can't wait. So what how much more length would I need to cut for a 12 inch section?
I am doing crown and I am having trouble with a bullnose. There is an odd angle near my fireplace and I just cannot figure this one out. I used my angle finder and know the angle is 120 degrees outside cut. However I cannot seem to figure out the cuts? Can you please help with some advice? Thank you.
@Zac Crow I would fire u on a job site. You're way over thinking this process. Your cuts would all be wrong the way you're over thinking the true angles. Take a chill pill' its not a math exam.