![]() ![]() You can draw parallel lines and arcs according to your ideas, which is very convenient to operate. 【EASY TO USE】:The scale of woodworking linear arc scriber tool is clearly visible. 【HIGH QUALITY】: It is made of high quality with aluminum alloy that surface is with anodic oxidation treatment, which could help to extend the service life of the product. It can be locked and fixed after each adjustment to ensure precision accuracy. 【VERSATILE ADJUSTMENT 】:You can change its shape according to your needs, only need to change the tightness of the pencil holder and nut to achieve different shapes to complete the demand. :Suitable for carpenters, engineers, steel workers, cabinet makers, home DIY enthusiasts or any type of craftsman measuring, marking and scribing. The included 3-color refill distinguishes marks with different meanings. :The stand and pen can be flexibly adjusted, the product is small in size, light in weight, and very convenient to carry. :With more than 15 marking applications, including scribing countertops, installing baseboards, floors, laminating tiles, decorative woodworking, laminating cabinets, under-stair storage, window seats, wall panels, custom woodworking installations, other remodeling and renovation work. :The scribing tool can be adjusted to contour mode, edge ruler mode, compass mode, scribing mode, just change the tightness of the pen barrel and the nut. And a scale is added on the base, which is more convenient to use. We enlarged the nut ④, which is more stable when locking the pencil. Then just make a tick mark with the scribe on the rails to know where to hold the stile parallel to the two rail ends.:Made of high quality aluminum alloy, sturdy and durable. We would just hold the stile on the two rails and at the wall at the narrowest point with the scribe set to take off of the stile to fit between the wall and the rails. I wonder if we aren't over-thinking this problem? We used to install cabinets with loose stiles all the time. It looked like something I'd like to try out. Otherwise I think just cutting the one dado in the back of the scribe is the way to go. They just use a portable table saw and make it parallel to the narrowest point of the opening. Most guys don't appear to bother with scribing these days. Then scribe it and screw it on from the inside of the cabinet. For the other you just need one dado in the scribe piece to position the scribe piece with a spline. If it is a proud scribe then you have to edge the scribe piece and you have to put in two dados and a tongue in the mounting piece. The more I think about this that is too much time spent on this chore. The mounting piece would be moved forward. The proud method would not require the device pictured. Doing proud scribes, (flush to the door/drawer faces), would seem impractical at best (mount mounting strip after scribing), and it cannot do overlay or bottom/wall return scribes. It appears to be limited to scribes that are flush to, or back from, the box face. Coming up with a way to easily/efficiently machine the scribe and mounting strips (what motivated my initial post) could make it viable. To contributor G: I agree, it could be an improvement over the spline method - both the holding and 1" offset aspects. I'm not sure about the router idea as there would be situations that would not work. That looks like a good way to go for holding the scribe piece. To contributor D: We used to do something similar when scribing to the ceiling, using splines. For typical cabinet scribing it seems easier just to do it the old fashioned way. It worked well for that, but I've only used it a few times since. I bought one several year back for a job to install eight or ten laminate window "sills" into drywalled openings - scribed on three sides. Below is QuickScribe's EuroScriber.Ĭlick here for higher quality, full size image I haven't used one, but using it for cabinet scribes looks overly complicated. I believe I purchased the kit with case, PC router and scribe. I only used it once and then subbed out the installs. I purchased one several years ago for scribing counter top to wall. I've seen the tool in performance a few years back at the AWFS in Vegas but was too overwhelmed with all the eye candy and forgot about it. Is anyone using the QuickScribe tool? I met the inventor today by complete random chance. ![]()
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