Excellent video! Very well explained and very informative. I used the wood corner shim as explained when installing my kitchen crown molding a few weeks ago and it worked great. Thanks again for the tip.
Excellent video. Can you explain how you transferred your stud marks which you made above the chalk line so you visibly could tell where to nail. Once you hold up the crown molding, you would not be able to see the markings. Thanks
Little did he mention that this is a extremely dangerous jig. The short cut off pieces fall in the blade path & get flung across the room. His 3rd cut did just this but got lucky & didn't fling out.
Or you find where you need to set your crown, glue a stick on both sides of your miter saw. Then you can do long pieces and not have to dickaround with raising your work piece up so far where you are squeezing to be accurate.
Half of whatever wall angle you measure as they never seem to be dead 90d... Using an angle finder tool is a great plan especially the ones that lock or have illuminated digital readouts as they come in handy at the saw if not writing everything down...
well I don't pop a line on the walls I pop my line on the ceiling walls can be waive and if you nail the wall first your crown will follow the in and outs try and look down a long wall along the ceiling after you install your crown and you will see what I am saying just trying to help also good video on the Kreg crown pro
Why is a chalk line necessary? I shove the crown in the corner and get it tight against ceiling and wall and fire away. No dealing with chalk. An angle measured on a corner won’t be the same as what is set on the saw. Both devices have variances.
Since crown molding is measured to the length of the bottom of the molding then cutting the crown molding upside down has an advantage in that the mark at which you want the cut to be located is then closest to the blade. You can test the position of the piece relative to the blade while the saw is off by lowering the saw blade and adjusting the precision of the blade cut. Cutting the crown piece the right way up then the pencil mark will be away from the blade - a bit more difficult to get the cut precise unless your saw has a laser guide?
When Using the Kreg Crown Pro why is everyone still turning the crown upside down, If you turn the jig around facing the fence then you can cut the crown molding as it will go on the wall still set your spring angle. Left inside, jig to left blade to left, for right inside blade right material right, Left outside material to Left, blade to right for right outside, material to right blade to left that's laying your material facing you with jig turned the opposite to fence
For most outside corners I normally cut 45.5° so you always get a nice sharp edge. But I never do inside corners with the chopsaw like he shows personally. I like doing cope cut for insides. It allows more play for imperfections a couple degrees either way when I'm doing really decorative crown or base
What happens when you have to cut a piece of 7 ½” wide crown that is 12 feet long. This tool would never work. Maybe ok for cheap contractor grade crown in tiny little rooms. Just another gadget that will not work in real world applications.
This guy is so clear and easy to understand. Just enough info to get the job done right without over talking.
After watching 15 different videos, finally found one that is clear and explained from A to Z, thanks
Excellent video! Very well explained and very informative.
I used the wood corner shim as explained when installing my kitchen crown molding a few weeks ago and it worked great. Thanks again for the tip.
Awesome jig. First time installed 5.25 dentil crown and came out perfect.
Excellent video. Can you explain how you transferred your stud marks which you made above the chalk line so you visibly could tell where to nail. Once you hold up the crown molding, you would not be able to see the markings. Thanks
Thank you so much for your information and videos explained about how to cut crown molding
Man you are the best thank you for all your hard work and beautiful details
Best video on this by far. Thank you
Great video, you'd made it look simple. Thank you sir for all the tips
Kreg is a huge company. WHY is the audio only one channel (left)?!?!
the best video on this !!!!!!
Little did he mention that this is a extremely dangerous jig. The short cut off pieces fall in the blade path & get flung across the room. His 3rd cut did just this but got lucky & didn't fling out.
You couldn’t be more gay
Great video! Thanks for sharing.
Very Good Job! Just wanted to ask, would coping the corner an option?
When you cut it that way, do you always cut at a 45 angle?
Or you find where you need to set your crown, glue a stick on both sides of your miter saw.
Then you can do long pieces and not have to dickaround with raising your work piece up so far where you are squeezing to be accurate.
Have a wonderful day sir God bless you 🙏
What degree do you set the miter saw cut?
Half of whatever wall angle you measure as they never seem to be dead 90d... Using an angle finder tool is a great plan especially the ones that lock or have illuminated digital readouts as they come in handy at the saw if not writing everything down...
Wow! Excellent tutorial!
Nice job explaining this!
well I don't pop a line on the walls I pop my line on the ceiling walls can be waive and if you nail the wall first your crown will follow the in and outs try and look down a long wall along the ceiling after you install your crown and you will see what I am saying just trying to help also good video on the Kreg crown pro
How about on concrete walls let me know thanks
Why is a chalk line necessary? I shove the crown in the corner and get it tight against ceiling and wall and fire away. No dealing with chalk. An angle measured on a corner won’t be the same as what is set on the saw. Both devices have variances.
Do you skip the furring
Great video, very helpful, thanks
I don’t understand the upside down before cutting. If you have the jig why flip the crown upside down?
Since crown molding is measured to the length of the bottom of the molding then cutting the crown molding upside down has an advantage in that the mark at which you want the cut to be located is then closest to the blade. You can test the position of the piece relative to the blade while the saw is off by lowering the saw blade and adjusting the precision of the blade cut. Cutting the crown piece the right way up then the pencil mark will be away from the blade - a bit more difficult to get the cut precise unless your saw has a laser guide?
I want to install crown molding above a window a foot below the ceiling. How would I secure it?
glue and nail the bottom edge
how do you decide the width of the furring strip?
How you installed crown molding on concrete walls let me know thanks
Add strips of lumber to the wall with concrete fasteners and adhesive .Then install over the top .
You never came back to making cuts that aren’t 90 degree corners
Other than setting spring angle on the jig and 45 deg on the mitre saw, is there anything else to take care of before the cut?
Nice video!
Baby powder works better than chaulk. Mix it with some blue and you'll be gravy and smellin as clean as a fresh daiper. Lol
Should be coping all your inside corners. Never have a gap, if you do it right.
Love your video very helpful thank you . if you have some free time could you swing by and help me finish up have 6 more rooms to go
When Using the Kreg Crown Pro why is everyone still turning the crown upside down, If you turn the jig around facing the fence then you can cut the crown molding as it will go on the wall still set your spring angle. Left inside, jig to left blade to left, for right inside blade right material right, Left outside material to Left, blade to right for right outside, material to right blade to left that's laying your material facing you with jig turned the opposite to fence
Thomas
What do you mean ?
Turn the jig backwards and put the moulding right side up?
@@dsokodrum67 yes if doing so the same way the molding go up is the way you cut
Cool! I will try it!
What angle is the saw set on?
45°unless you have to adjust a half a degree to accommodate slightly off corners
For most outside corners I normally cut 45.5° so you always get a nice sharp edge. But I never do inside corners with the chopsaw like he shows personally. I like doing cope cut for insides. It allows more play for imperfections a couple degrees either way when I'm doing really decorative crown or base
NIce trick, with that shim...
This thing is a death trap
Bought it from lowes
Returning it after 2 cuts
Not supported correctly
Pieces will fly off
Silent movies ?
terrible job of expaining it idk how yall think he explained it so well I'm so confused now
Must have missed angle adjustments.
Good lord, the audio in this video is ear rape
I really wanted to watch this video but something is wrong with the audio and you can barely hear the guy talking
What happens when you have to cut a piece of 7 ½” wide crown that is 12 feet long. This tool would never work. Maybe ok for cheap contractor grade crown in tiny little rooms. Just another gadget that will not work in real world applications.
Total BS ! Just cut on the flat, change the miter and bevel angles end of story.
N