Login:
Pass:
Forgotten Pass?
Navigation
Main Page
Community Forums
Current events
Recent changes
Random page
Help
Contents
Planning
Tutorials
First Build
Hardware
Software
Tools
Materials
Electronics
Painting
Overclocking
List Of Suppliers
Search
 
Toolbox
What links here
Related changes
Upload file
Special pages
Printable version
Permanent link


Coping Saw

From TheBestCaseScenario

Jump to: navigation, search
Coping Saw Good for detail

A coping saw is a type of hand saw used to cut intricate shapes and interior cutouts in woodworking or carpentry but with a suitable blade can be used with just about any material. It is widely used to cut Molding to create coped rather than miter joints. It is also occasionally used to create fretwork. A coping saw consists of a very thin blade stretched between the ends of a C-shaped frame, to which the handle is attached. The blade is easily removed from this frame, so that it can be passed through a drilled hole in the middle of a piece of wood, reattached, and start cutting from the middle of the piece.

The direction of the cut is also easy to change because of the thinness of the blade, and because the blade can be arbitrarily rotated with respect to the frame. The teeth on a coping saw blade should face the handle ("backwards" as compared with most other Western saws); the action of pulling the coping saw allows the frame to remain in tension (and thus reduces blade breakages). This is as opposed to most other saws which only cut in the "push" direction.

A Coping saw is often used with a v-board, also known as a birdsmouth board, which is a flat board with a "V" shape cutout in one end. In use, the v-board is clamped to the bench so that the section with the cutout hangs over the edge. This allows the work to be held down flat whilst shapes are cut into it. The cutout allows the coping saw blade to pass through the work unimpeded. This technique is common in marquetry.

This article about Coping Saws is a stub. Help us out and expand on it!