I need to cut the hardwood flooring between the door jambs in order to install a threshold. Any suggestions as to how to do this such that the result is a nice, even, straight cut?
Thanks
Thanks
I appreciate your suggestion, but there are other doors in close proximity, and I want to maintain a consistent look.Why don't you install the threshold on top of the floor. It will look alot better in the long run.
My skills and patience could be called into question :laughing:. This is also a good suggestion with my concern being for the first plunge cut.You could us e a skil saw (with good new blade) and finish off with a multi-function tool like a Fein Multimaster or the like. The finished product will only be as good as your skills and patience.
My skills and patience could be called into question :laughing:. This is also a good suggestion with my concern being for the first plunge cut.
Thanks Ernesto.
I can't help it only 1% cares to invest in making their life easier and more productive :whistling True it doesn't cut the whole way but it's more than 18"...add a 3" blade on the Supercut and it makes quick work of the remaining though.One of those would be nice Precision, I bet maybe 1% of all hardwood guys own one though. Beside you might get only a foot and a half across the doorway with the saw anyway.
I have a 32" that originally came with my MFT/3 and I cut it down to about 26" IIRC specifically for cutting flooring off in door ways. I run into a lot of situations where the previous installer ran something too far into a jamb and I need to cut it off to make my transition sit under the door.I was looking at a shorty board for my 55 but the shortest I found was 36. Wouldn't fit most doors. A 24 would be perfect.
Don't need em to make an accurate long, straight cut either. I make jigs using 1/2" mdf. 1 1/2" piece of MDF tacked on top of a 6" piece of MDF. Place shoe of saw on top of the 6" MDF with the edge riding along the 1 1/2" piece. Run saw the length of the jig & you've got a very cheap, accurate track saw. Drop a few 23 guage pins through it into the floor & you're ready to go.Granted the T-55 is a fine tool and so is the Dewalt track saw, maybe even better but ya don't need one to make a couple 32 inch cuts.
:clap:Don't need em to make an accurate long, straight cut either. I make jigs using 1/2" mdf. 1 1/2" piece of MDF tacked on top of a 6" piece of MDF. Place shoe of saw on top of the 6" MDF with the edge riding along the 1 1/2" piece. Run saw the length of the jig & you've got a very cheap, accurate track saw. Drop a few 23 guage pins through it into the floor & you're ready to go.
Wow. A helluva lot of ASSuming going on in this thread...where did I say I couldn't do it the "old" way? All I said was I love my TS for that job. I can't help it if you guys are cheap and don't want to spend what would amount to, what - one room's worth of labor money on something that has only a ****load of uses, and can still give finish grade cuts too. Don't let me stand in the way of your professional progress.
Pinwheel - I respect you a ton and you put out some of the best work on this board. I find it hard to believe you would rather waste tons of time and labor building a jig when you could simply adjust a saw, make a measurement or two, and slap down a track and make the cut. Not to mention get waaaaay better results than a circular saw - I don't care what blade you use.
Using some of you guys mentality against you here:
Why do you use compressors and nail guns? You could hand nail everything. Why use sanders? Hand scrapers and sand paper does the job. Why use miter saws? A box and a hand saw works just as good. But I mention a track saw and everybody in the peanut gallery jumps up and shouts down the blasphemy - hypocrits.
You know - I'd be willing to bet that every person that talks **** about a TS not being necessary and how much they "cost" has never used one. Use one for a week and I bet my ass you wouldn't sell it back...
While you guys are making jigs, taping surfaces, using chisels, etc. - I'll be four doorways ahead of you with better results and less aggravation. But hey - you "saved" money. My time is worth money, if yours ain't give me a call, I'll just sub my grunt work out to you and make a profit.
I second the router---It will get you closer to the jambs than a Skill Saw..
Note: above is good if the boards are parallel to the door.If not I suggest using router to groove out and sharp chisels.