The trim piece set up under the jig I made for milling the 30 degree angles next to a test piece. |
Milling the angle. |
Using relative dimentioning to mark the slight cut that gets made at the end. |
Cutting perpendicular to the main 30 degree cut. This cut to to adjoin the fascia on the wall adjacent to the window. Yes, I know the saws not cutting, but I couldnt cut and take a photo at the same time. |
All cut. |
Determining the width of the fascia above the window by referencing the adjoining fascia. |
About to cut of the excess at the other end. |
Cut and ready for milling. |
Determining the router bit depth by adjusting it to my line. |
Marking of the angled cut needed to fit tight to the soffit, which is not plumb. |
Using a melamine shelf as a reference for the bushing guided bit to mill the angled cut. |
I didnt clamp the melamine to the trim piece well enough and made a small mess with the cut. Luckily this is the top and the joint between the fascia and soffit will get caulked anychoice so I can hide this. |
Trimming the wide end ever so slightly so that it is perfectly flush with the adjoining fascia piece. |
A test fit. So far, so good. |
Milling the notch to accommodate the window. |
I clamped this board to the fascia piece and used it as a reference for my hand saw to square up the router cut. |
Cleaning up the inside corner (yes, you can chisel PVC trim). |
The notch to accommodate the window. |
A nice, tight fit between the fascia on the side of the window and the fascia along the eave. |
The installed fascia piece. |
The next piece of trim to mill and install will the the extension of the eave fascia to bring its bottom edge flush with the fascia on the sides of the window. Ill biscuit the fascia along its length to ensure the pieces stay flush. |
The bay window, almost completely trimmed.
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