EasyCoper from Rockler

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  • ssmith1627
    Senior Member
    • Dec 2005
    • 704
    • Corryton, TN, USA.
    • Ryobi BT3100

    #1

    EasyCoper from Rockler

    Anyone tried using this jig ?

    http://www.rockler.com/findit.cfm?pa...4&cookietest=1

    Would love to hear a review of it. If it truly is a help, I'd be willing to spend the money on it !

    Thanks,
    Steve
  • jhart
    Veteran Member
    • Feb 2004
    • 1715
    • Minneapolis, MN, USA.
    • BT3100

    #2
    Haven't used it. Have seen pictures of it and it looks real neat and easy to use. If you've done coping on Crown molding, you know what a pain in the A** it is. If you buy it, please do a review.
    Joe
    "All things are difficult before they are easy"

    Comment

    • greencat
      Established Member
      • Dec 2005
      • 273
      • Grand Haven Mi
      • 3100

      #3
      Wow - that does look easy but $35 for 2 pieces of plastic seems steep. I wonder how difficult it would be to make this out of wood?
      Thanks again,
      Mike

      Comment

      • jbalders
        Established Member
        • Oct 2003
        • 298
        • Vienna, VA, USA.
        • BT3100 + Shopsmith

        #4
        Mfg's site: http://www.easycoper.com/

        I saw it in action at the woodworking show a couple of years ago. It looked real easy in the demo, then again, all of the demos are designed to make the products look super easy to use. I was also taken aback by the price given what you're actually buying -- it seems like $19.95 would be a better pricepoint to me. Then again, if it saved you hours of hand coping, it might be worth it.

        At the time, I didn't have any crown moulding to do, so I didn't take advantage of the show special price.

        Jeff
        Jeff

        BOFH excuse #360: Your parity check is overdrawn and you're out of cache.

        Comment

        • Thom2
          Resident BT3Central Research Ass.
          • Jan 2003
          • 1786
          • Stevens, PA, USA.
          • Craftsman 22124

          #5
          I bought a set, they're laying in the shop at the moment along with the 120' of 4 3/4" crown moulding that's supposed to get put up.

          If my wife had her way, I'd be able to write a review tomorrow night, but she's getting used to not getting her way

          If I get to it before anybody else does, I'll write a review.

          Originally posted by greencat
          Wow - that does look easy but $35 for 2 pieces of plastic seems steep. I wonder how difficult it would be to make this out of wood?
          yeah .... I thought the same thing at first .... except that you almost need to have a 'real set' to get the angles from to make templates .... so I just coughed up the cash (I'm "froogle" but I did it anyway) and bought a set.
          If it ain't broke.. don't fix it!!!... but you can always 'hop it up'
          **one and only purchaser of a BT3C official thong**

          Comment

          • rickd
            Established Member
            • Jan 2004
            • 422
            • Cowichan Bay, 30 mi. north of Victoria, B.C., Canada.
            • Ryobi BT3100

            #6
            hi,

            i've never installed crown moulding but it is on loml's priority list, so i'd best find out how to do it. in addition to the 'easy coper'($35), rockler also sells a 'crown moulding compound miter jig' for $20.99 that they say allows for the cutting and installation of crown moulding without coping.

            so, dumb question time: "if both jigs work as specified, is there any reason why i would want to use the 'easy coper' instead of the 'crown moulding compound miter jig" which looks simpler to use?

            in looking at the two jigs, apart from the price, the main difference i see is the 'crown moulding compound miter jig' only handles stock up to 4 1/2" wide while the 'easy coper' can cut up to 5 1/2" moulding.
            rick doyle

            Rick's Woodworking Website

            Comment

            • Hoover
              Veteran Member
              • Mar 2003
              • 1273
              • USA.

              #7
              I am going to play devil's advocate here. How many corners are really at 90 degrees? I have too many corners that were anything but 90 degrees, and I wound up coping them anyways!!! Sorry to burst any bubbles here, but you really need to measure your angle first before hoping that it is 90 degrees.
              No good deed goes unpunished

              Comment

              • Bruce Cohen
                Veteran Member
                • May 2003
                • 2698
                • Nanuet, NY, USA.
                • BT3100

                #8
                When I was working in the Millwork Dept of Home Depot and people would ask about diy Crown Molding and think that all they would have cut is 45 deg angles, I would tell them that "The only 90 deg angles in their home were mistakes", they usually then responded, "do you know anyone who installs crown".

                Bruce

                I wouldn't install the stuff on a dare.
                "Western civilization didn't make all men equal,
                Samuel Colt did"

                Comment

                • lkazista
                  Established Member
                  • Jan 2004
                  • 330
                  • Nazareth, PA, USA.

                  #9
                  I bought a set at one of the woodworking shows last year. I have only played with it a little bit using some left over crown. I have an entire house to get to. I have only done 2 bedrooms so far, and that was before the easycoper. $35 is steep, but if it can save me from ruining even one cut on a big board, it will have paid for itself.

                  The only goofy thing that I found with it was that I needed to buy 'longer' jigsaw blades than what I stock in the shop. Bosch makes some long ones. Overall the jig works well. Coping real wood crown is not very hard to do by hand, but it takes time, and this jig certain speeds things up.

                  Lee

                  Comment

                  • brecklundin
                    Forum Newbie
                    • May 2007
                    • 51

                    #10
                    just thought I would resurrect this thread in case any of the suspects might have had time to use the EasyCoper?

                    I have a bunch of crown to install this winter...saving the inside pro-jects for then...and happened across this nifty looking gadget...but, it's not cheap if it doesn't really work....the video sure makes it look simple but didn't show anything but the coping part of the deal. They didn't show just how well the pieces match up after the fact.

                    Comment

                    • reddog552
                      Established Member
                      • Dec 2006
                      • 245
                      • Belleville Il.
                      • Bt3000

                      #11
                      Spring ?

                      I was looking at the coper instruction sheet they say its made for coping crown with a spring of 52/38.Ive hand coped a bunch,but I have no idea what spring is anybody know inlighten Me THANKS
                      The bitterness of poor quality lingers long after the sweetness of low cost is forgotten!

                      Comment

                      • gsmittle
                        Veteran Member
                        • Aug 2004
                        • 2793
                        • St. Louis, MO, USA.
                        • BT 3100

                        #12
                        Originally posted by reddog552
                        I was looking at the coper instruction sheet they say its made for coping crown with a spring of 52/38.Ive hand coped a bunch,but I have no idea what spring is anybody know inlighten Me THANKS
                        IIRC, spring is the distance the crown is from the actual corner. The long side of the triangle, in other words. Looks like the 52/38 might be in mm.

                        OTOH (using all sorts of acronyms this morning ) the only crown molding I've ever done is on theatrical scenery, and that's a whole different mode of construction, so I might be way off base here....

                        g.
                        Smit

                        "Be excellent to each other."
                        Bill & Ted

                        Comment

                        • Thom2
                          Resident BT3Central Research Ass.
                          • Jan 2003
                          • 1786
                          • Stevens, PA, USA.
                          • Craftsman 22124

                          #13
                          Originally posted by reddog552
                          I was looking at the coper instruction sheet they say its made for coping crown with a spring of 52/38.Ive hand coped a bunch,but I have no idea what spring is anybody know inlighten Me THANKS
                          The spring angle is the angle where the crown meets the wall and ceiling. Crown never sits @ 45 degrees on the wall (that'd be too easy). I think the first number (52) is the angle against the ceiling, and the second number (38) is the angle against the wall (IIRC, if not somebody will straighten me out).

                          BTW: don't bring this up with my wife ... but my crown moulding is still stacked in the shop
                          If it ain't broke.. don't fix it!!!... but you can always 'hop it up'
                          **one and only purchaser of a BT3C official thong**

                          Comment

                          • LCHIEN
                            Super Moderator
                            • Dec 2002
                            • 21971
                            • Katy, TX, USA.
                            • BT3000 vintage 1999

                            #14
                            Originally posted by jbalders
                            Mfg's site: http://www.easycoper.com/

                            ... I was also taken aback by the price given what you're actually buying -- it seems like $19.95 would be a better pricepoint to me. Then again, if it saved you hours of hand coping, it might be worth it.

                            At the time, I didn't have any crown moulding to do, so I didn't take advantage of the show special price.

                            Jeff
                            In the absence of competition, pricing is determined by what it costs to make and what it's worth to the customer. If it saves the customer 100's of dollars in labor and materials and it only costs $10 to mold from plastic but the molds cost $10,000 or more to make you have a complex equation based on how many you expect to sell at what prices (demand curves) and also a reasonable rate of return on investment (have to amortize the cost of the mold over the units sold) as well as 15% of your cash tied up plus expenses, etc. Not to mention receiving compensation for your unique idea.

                            For a device with no competition (limited market, early advantage, or patent protection) then the spread may be very large between what its worth to the customers and what it costs to make and market it. If there is competition, then you may be squeezed very tightly and have to watch your costs carefully or bet on selling lots of them, to make money.

                            BTW, this looks like something pretty easy to make yourself.
                            Last edited by LCHIEN; 07-01-2007, 09:52 AM.
                            Loring in Katy, TX USA
                            If your only tool is a hammer, you tend to treat all problems as if they were nails.
                            BT3 FAQ - https://www.sawdustzone.org/forum/di...sked-questions

                            Comment

                            • ragswl4
                              Veteran Member
                              • Jan 2007
                              • 1559
                              • Winchester, Ca
                              • C-Man 22114

                              #15
                              I have not used (nor do I have) the Coper from Rockler but I do have the Crown Molding Jig. I used it to install molding on a run of kitchen cabinets. It worked perfectly where the inside and outside corners were exactly 90 degrees. I had 5 corners and 1 of 5 was actually 90, the others were 1-1.5 degrees less and took some fiddling with the miter saw angle to get it right.

                              At every corner I made test cuts and test cuts and test cuts until I had the angle right, then cut the real molding. Somewhat slow and tedious, but the corners were all perfect. It was my first time doing crown molding so I have happy with the results.

                              As a previous post indicated, the spring angle for the Coper is 52/38. The jig I used is for 45/45 spring angle.
                              RAGS
                              Raggy and Me in San Felipe
                              sigpic

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