You will need a radial arm saw or a stady hand with a skill saw for that cut.
Only short ones.
Rip, cross, dado & "sink".Table saw cuts include rip cuts, crosscuts, miter box cuts and bevel cuts.A rip cut is a cut made parallel to the wood grain.A crosscut is generally at a fixed 90 degree angle.A miter cut involves a table saw with a miter gauge. A table saw with a miter gauge has one or two slots or grooves running from the front to the back of the table. These slots or grooves are used to position and guide the miter gauge or crosscut fence to set the miter cut at a precise angle. With this cut, the material being cut is angled versus the blade.Bevels are cut by changing the angle of the blade with respect to the surface of the wood on the table.
They should but still they demand care and a good "hand" to make consistent cuts.
A miter saw. A skill saw will do it with some practice.
You place you piece of wood carefully on the table and pull the blade down so it cuts through where you want.
You need to take what degreee turn you want divide that by how many welds you want that will give you the angle of miter cuts to find your starting piece a take the radius of bend muliply by tangent of miter cut
2 horizontal cuts and 3 vertical cuts OR 3 horizontal cuts and 2 vertical cuts
Miter saw laser is a very essential tool if you want to cut perfectly smooth edges. Laser cuts are faster than traditional methods but can be hard to control. Generally, you can buy the miter saw lase on Amazon, eBay, Walmart, and home depot We wrote an article where we cover the top 5 best lasers for your miter saw.
well the answer is 16.
I'm not sure I understand the material your using. I'm assuming it is wood. IF so, don't miter them unless you have a good supply of valium. Take two pieces of 5/4" and rip them down to make a corner. The siding will dive into the corner and look good. All straight cuts, no valium. BCLEAR. If your saw has a big enough blade, lay siding flat, face up on saw. You place spacer piece, that is the same thickness of the butt of the siding, under the thin edge of the siding, to mimic how it would lay on the wall, then cut a 45deg. miter. Test & adjust w/ scrape pieces till you get it right.
Assuming the two end pieces will also be 10 inches and the cuts do not take up any space, the board must be 130 inches long. But it could be only 122 inches if the first and last cuts are only 1 inch from the ends, but still 10 inches from the adjacent cuts. Or it could be any longer length if either or both of the ends is more than 10 inches.
Square Cuts!