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Dr Wu
 
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Default Kitchen Cupboards

I made a big mistake and tried to cut cupboard pelmets with a mitre box and
the joints are no way good enough, any suggestions as to make them almost
invisible?


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Bob Minchin
 
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Dr Wu wrote in message ...
I made a big mistake and tried to cut cupboard pelmets with a mitre box and
the joints are no way good enough, any suggestions as to make them almost
invisible?


You could try a power mitre saw. These enable small adjustments to the angle
and minute re-cuts. Still not an easy job.
On external corners, small gaps can be closed by rolling a round metal rod
(screwdriver?) up and down the joint. Small gaps can also be filled with a
filler made from wood glue and sawdust.

Good luck

Bob


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Chris Bacon
 
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Dr Wu wrote:
I made a big mistake and tried to cut cupboard pelmets with a mitre box and
the joints are no way good enough, any suggestions as to make them almost
invisible?


Not necessarily a mistake, but you need a good appropriate tenon
saw and a reasonable used mitre box and a bit of technique. If
you've already made cuts/joints, then use a filler a shade darker
than the (stain of) the timber in question. You could also cut a
small piece of timber and shave it to cover the internal angle.
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kitchenman
 
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When I was fitting I found that as the cornice or light rails was never
straight it was better to cut all the joints first then glue them together
either on the worktops, cover first or on the floor.

Electric mitre saws are cheap now, about the same price as a length of
cornice/pelmet/light rail, get one with as many teeth as possible & tungsten
tipped, could cost as much as the saw.
Wanna do it right, get the right tool

Then lift them into place & screw up/down.

If there are lots of joints make all externals on worktop/floor then put in
place & make internal joints, errors are less visible.

I use superglue for the joints, there are many types, get the right one.

Like riding a bike, easy when you stop falling off.
--
regards
dave batter
www.kitchenman.co.uk
www.sxmitres.info
www.essex-sandivers.info
Skype me on kitchenmanuk
http://oneandone.co.uk/xml/init?k_id5568652

"Chris Bacon" wrote in message
...
Dr Wu wrote:
I made a big mistake and tried to cut cupboard pelmets with a mitre box

and
the joints are no way good enough, any suggestions as to make them

almost
invisible?


Not necessarily a mistake, but you need a good appropriate tenon
saw and a reasonable used mitre box and a bit of technique. If
you've already made cuts/joints, then use a filler a shade darker
than the (stain of) the timber in question. You could also cut a
small piece of timber and shave it to cover the internal angle.



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Ben Blaukopf
 
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Dr Wu wrote:
I made a big mistake and tried to cut cupboard pelmets with a mitre box and
the joints are no way good enough, any suggestions as to make them almost
invisible?



I had the same problem. I started with the cut from a cheap hand
mitresaw which had pre-notched angles that weren't quite right. I took
two pieces of scrap wood (call these A and B), and stuck them together
(using the mitre-fast glue!) at an exact 45 degree angle. I then clamped
the pelmet (previously cut in a mitre box) to board A such that the
mitred section just overhung the edge of board B. I then ran a plan
along the edge of board B to trim the joint.

I found a piccie at
http://www.amgron.clara.net/planingp...teingindex.htm

which illustrates a slightly more sophisticated version of what I was
doing (piccies 7 and 8 'when trimming mitres...') are the ones you want.

It improved the final finish - it certainly isn't perfect (i.e. I think
it looks crap, everyone else thinks it's good). Since my flat took 6
days to sell, I reckon it must be half decent.

Ben
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