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It's going to be replaced with a crosscut sled soon. I just don't have the materials I want for that yet, and my truck's broke down temporarily.

This was a great little project to both sharpen and practice my chisels on too. I just sharpen incrementally, testing between bouts, and I stop sharpening when it's easy to chisel. The notch the miter fits in was done entirely with dull and then sharp chisels and sandpaper.

The board's just a piece of pine scrap I had. The cuts were all done on the table saw. Miter gauge already had that screw hole there, so I just made the same hole in the board, sunk in with a washer on the flat side. Surfacing was a hasty job with 80 grit and then 220 grit on the orbital sander. It's treated with two overnight coats of boiled linseed oil.

It's going to be replaced with a crosscut sled soon. I just don't have the materials I want for that yet, and my truck's broke down temporarily. This was a great little project to both sharpen and practice my chisels on too. I just sharpen incrementally, testing between bouts, and I stop sharpening when it's easy to chisel. The notch the miter fits in was done entirely with dull and then sharp chisels and sandpaper. The board's just a piece of pine scrap I had. The cuts were all done on the table saw. Miter gauge already had that screw hole there, so I just made the same hole in the board, sunk in with a washer on the flat side. Surfacing was a hasty job with 80 grit and then 220 grit on the orbital sander. It's treated with two overnight coats of boiled linseed oil.

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[–] 1 pt

Yeah, please do. Tbh, I was going to replace the stock miter in a couple of paychecks, but I think I'm gonna hold off now.