Hi all,
In my eagerness to get the new skirting board down in my little refurbishment I neglected to ensure I could close the door... which I can't.
Yes, it's a cock-up.
However, I'm not too bothered because it's not like I could've used my mitre saw to cut a neat 45 degree angle, it's much, much shallower than that... the area I need to remove is displayed in this picture:
My question is... what tool would I be best using for that job? Should I just get my belt sander on that and blast away at it... or should I use something like this double-edge pull saw that I've seen at Screwfix:
http://www.screwfix.com/p/irwin-double-edged-pull-saw-7-17tpi-9-5-241mm/33430
I would love it if some seasoned pros could give me a view on the best way to go about it.
You can laugh at me too. BTW, not the finished article with the skirting etc. - still need to tart it up - it's looking striking in the rooms I've completed.
In my eagerness to get the new skirting board down in my little refurbishment I neglected to ensure I could close the door... which I can't.
Yes, it's a cock-up.
However, I'm not too bothered because it's not like I could've used my mitre saw to cut a neat 45 degree angle, it's much, much shallower than that... the area I need to remove is displayed in this picture:
My question is... what tool would I be best using for that job? Should I just get my belt sander on that and blast away at it... or should I use something like this double-edge pull saw that I've seen at Screwfix:
http://www.screwfix.com/p/irwin-double-edged-pull-saw-7-17tpi-9-5-241mm/33430
I would love it if some seasoned pros could give me a view on the best way to go about it.
You can laugh at me too. BTW, not the finished article with the skirting etc. - still need to tart it up - it's looking striking in the rooms I've completed.