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Woodworking Machinery Angle Scales and Terminology
Not all woodworking machinery angle scales are created
alike. In fact, there are two different conventions for the
calibration of angle scales in common use on woodworking
machinery. One type of scale is calibrated to treat a square
cut as a 90 degree cut, while the other scale treats a
square cut as a 0 degree cut. Along with that, the terms
used in woodworking to describe angled cuts don't make the
origin of the angle measurement perfectly clear. The result
is often some confusion about what it means to cut a piece
of wood at a certain angle. Fortunately, the confusion is
easily clarified by looking at a couple of woodworking terms
that refer to angled cuts ("miter" and "bevel") and at how
the two saw scales are set up the measure angles.
Miter Gauges, Miter Saws and Miter Cuts

The term "square cut" means to cut a board at a 90 degree
angle relative to one of it's edges. The term "miter" - when
it's used describe an angled cut - implies a comparison to a
square cut. To make a miter cut means to make an other-than-square cut
in a material in preparation for making a miter joint. In
keeping with that, miter cuts are measured with respect to a
square cut. Making a 22-1/2 degree miter cut, for example,
means making a cut at 22-1/2 degrees in one direction or the
other from square across the board.
You may have noticed that most power miter saws are
adapted to this terminology. Most miter saw angle scales
are set up so that the saw will make a square cut when the
saw's angle scale is set at 0 degrees. One way to look at
this is that the miter saw's scale is set up to measure
the"amount of miter" that's being cut, and that setting the
saw to cut 90 degrees straight across a board is,
essentially, setting it to cut a "0 degree miter."
Table
saw miter gauges, on the other hand, are typically
calibrated to produce a square cut when they are set at 90
degrees. What the table saw miter gauge measures, in other
words, is the angle of difference between the front edge of
the miter gauge and plane of the saw blade. To get the same
cut that a miter saw set at 30 degrees would produce, you'd
have to set a typical miter gauge at 60 degrees.
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| A 30 Degree Miter Cut |
Miter saw setting = 30°
90° - 30° = 60°
Table saw miter gauge setting = 60° |
Switching between the two scales is very simple. As you
probably remember from geometry class, the two acute (less
than 90 degree angles) of every right triangle are
complementary angles (add up to 90 degrees). Since the
intersections of the edge of an angled cut
and the reference lines of the two calibration
systems form a right triangle, the setting that will produce
identical cuts from one scale to the next are complementary
angles.
Bevel Cuts
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| 22-1/2 Degree Chamfer Bit |
Strictly speaking the term "bevel" can describe any angled
cut, but it usually refers to a cut that's angled relative
to face of a material. The angle of a bevel cut is almost
always measured against a square edge-cut. A 22-1/2 degree
bevel setting on a table saw positions the saw blade at
a 22-1/2 degree angle relative to it's most upright
position. Most angle-cutting router bits follow the same
convention (except that they use term "chamfer" instead of
"bevel" to describe the angled cut they make) - the cutting
edge of a 22-1/2 degree chamfer bit tips inward from the
surface of the router's base or the surface of a table
router table at a 67-1/2 degree angle.
Knowing the terminology and angle scale calibration
conventions used in woodworking - along with a little common
sense - is all it takes to get your tools set up to make the
angled cuts you're after. Beginning on the next page, we'll
take a look at some of the math that goes along with making
angled cuts and building shapes with "odd angled" parts.
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