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You know cutting crown molding can be a big problem and anytime you do any type of interior
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carpentry you think you might know what to do but many many people just like you have trouble
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cutting crown molding and here's why. Let's look at this framing square. Notice how it looks like a
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wall in a ceiling intersection. This is a 90 degree angle. Well check out the crown molding
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If you go ahead and hold the crown molding this way it's not going to work. If you hold the crown
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crown molding this way it's not going to work, but what happens if you rotate it into the
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wall ceiling just like that? You can see that is the way that crown molding has to be held
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inside the miter box saw. Here's a typical piece of baseboard. Notice how it's three
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quarters of an inch thick or so, just like the crown molding. It's got a flat surface
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here and a flat back, but it also has a profiled edge here. Remember it gets held in the miter
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box saw this way. Here's a typical piece of casing that might go around a door or window
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thing. Notice how it's about three quarters of an inch thick or so, looks very much like the crown molding and it has a flat bottom and a profiled face. But it gets held in the
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saw flat. Here's our piece of crown molding. Notice it looks very similar to a piece of
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casing or baseboard. It's about the same thickness, it's got a profiled face and it's smooth on
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the back. But you don't hold it in the saw like this, you don't hold it in the saw like
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this, you actually have to turn it upside down and rotate it so that the shoulder and
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the foot are flush with the fence and the bottom table. And when you do that, you're
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ready to go. Cutting crown molding is a piece of cake as long as you take your time and think about
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what you're doing. I'm Tim Carter, Ask the Builder. If you want to discover more home
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improvement tips, go to askthebuilder.com