Sports Dad
September 2, 2025
This worked perfectly for coping inside corners for baseboards! I am replacing all of the baseboards in my house, and I tried using the coping saw to cope the inside corners, but it was very slow and would have really cost a lot of time to do it that way. So I started watching some videos on U-tube. I combined two of the ideas I saw, using the miter saw to trim the lower, straight portion of the baseboard, then used the dremel and this shaping wheel to cope the top, decorative, portion of the baseboard. It worked right through the pine and made the coping job so much easier. In case you are interested, there is one U-tube video that shows how to cope inside corners using the dremel. The other video on U-tube shows how to miter for inside corners using the dremel and a plane attachment, even though it mentions coping in the title. The corners look so much better when you cope vs just cutting at a 45 because most corners in home are not actually 90 degrees, but some variation of that. This tool "cuts" through the wood quickly. It is really more like sanding than cutting and it does generate a lot of sawdust! I would not use it for sanding, as it is too aggressive and eats through the wood quickly, but for removing wood and shaping it, this works well! Oh, be sure to use a pencil to highlight the edge of the cut before you start to cope it, it makes it so much easier to see what you need to remove!
Never received
August 28, 2025
Best thing for shaping.
reviewers name
August 26, 2025
Very aggressive removal of material. I used it primally on MDF for 'coping' crown molding. Very fast and carbide is holding up very well. Dremel bits can be hit or miss, or sometimes be too slow or ineffective - this is a must have bit though. You will be glad you have it one day even if you have no use at the moment. (I bought two).
Yariv Haguel
July 7, 2025
Excellent for cutting and shaping wood
Casey (Pio) Burton
May 23, 2025
Drimal's best bit ever, but can never find it. Why Drimal??? Been usingthis bit since 2011 but haven't had one for the past 2 years. :-(
G. Linn
May 18, 2025
I'm replacing the floor molding in a room where I have just installed laminate flooring. Generally, as a homeowner, I put down new molding rather than put back the molding that came off - it's as much work to clean up the old molding as to put down new. So, I usually do the standard woodworking thing for inside joints by making 45 degree miters. We all know that it is maybe easier to "cope" an inside joint but DIYers, like me, are maybe not as good at making coped joints. Online, I saw a video where a guy used this specific bit to quickly cope inside corners. He was using fiber based molding whereas I planned to use wood molding. So, I ordered this bit. I only needed it for less than a dozen joints so didn't care if it would last or not. I tried it and it works just fine. I did use my jigsaw to saw off a lot of "un-needed" wood before coping with it. I'm sure that this bit has a lot of other uses. It works in a Dremel or a Rototool.
Icabod
April 25, 2025
We work with hard shell calabash gourds. The skin is very tough, and hard to remove. This makes quick work of stripping the skin and removing imperfections.I bought this as a replacement to a wheel I’d purchased some 10 years ago. They last.
tesajeni
April 12, 2025
I used this tool as a shaper on my Dremel for coping molding. This worked very well if I put my thumb on the left hand on the Dremel to help guide and stabilize the tool. I quickly got an exact line on the molding. It is dusty as the cut is all sawdust, but it is very fast and doesn't take a huge amount of skill to get a good cut like a coping saw does.Not obvious in the description is this tool has a curved surface with the center screw depressed. The cutting surface is all on the top. The 544 tool is flat. The curved surface gives this tool a bit of an advantage in complex curves and the back cutting needed for crown coping. It is slightly harder than the 544 to do a flat, but it doesn't take much to get that just right too.
John H
April 4, 2025
I got this to do Wood Carving and shaping with my Dremel. It does a great job. I would buy this again.
Enrique López
February 21, 2025
Ya adquirà de la marca Dremel, otro disco de corte como este, sólo que no tenÃa éste modelo en particular. Es idóneo para hacer tallados cóncavos en madera, lo cual puede resultar en ahorro de otros sistemas, dependerá qué tanta experiencia se tenga y usos. La verdad, es que desde que me cambié de Truper a Dremel, la calidad y refacciones es más amplia para Dremel. Lo cual hace de mi trabajo como tallerista-artesanal de mucho ahorro de tiempo, frustraciones y a la larga, compras que en calidad por materiales, duran ¡muchÃsimo! Me llegó en tiempo y forma.
Mr. Les Taylor
January 9, 2025
Amasing tool to shape small items with you Dremel (or look-a-like).
jRgmDz
December 23, 2024
Cumple objetivamente con lo que brinda de información. Lo ocupo con un moto tool Truper sin mayor problema.
watchman
December 20, 2024
The Dremel 801 burr is vastly better than any other burr on the market, including any of the Kutzall range that everyone raves about. I have bought a lot of burrs and knowing what I do now, this is all you need for oak bowls and spoons, though the Kutzalls may have a use if you're operating in a taste vacuum and are doing those impossibly NAFF "wood sprites" so beloved of our American friends. Strangely, the 801 is impossible to find on the UK Amazon app, you have to go and buy it on the Amazon UK website itself - this is not the first time I've encountered "invisible" products on the Amazon app, so always check the actual website. If you look at the customer ratings for the 801 product, you'll see they are all EU and no UK ratings - bizarre.