Results 1 to 7 of 7
Thread: Question for kitchen builders
-
6th April 2021, 12:18 PM #1GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- May 2003
- Location
- Central Coast, NSW
- Posts
- 614
Question for kitchen builders
Hi. I am finishing a kitchenette and a laundry. In both cases I am wanting to fit a cover panel to the underside of a row of elevated cabinets. The cover panels are about 2750 x 320 and 1500 x 320 respectively, are made of spray painted mdf, and will sit at about eye-level.
The alternatives I can see for fixing these in place are:
1. Use adhesive. Not preferred because I like all the cabinetry to be built to be disassembled in a non-destructive manner if need be.
2. Use screws from above. Not good because there will be screw heads in the floor of the cabinets - not visible but likely to be damaging to crockery etc.
3. Screw from below. Aesthetically not real good as the heads will be visible
So I have three ways of doing the job none of which I like.
Is there another method I’m missing?
How is this job usually done?
Cheers
ArronApologies for unnoticed autocomplete errors.
-
6th April 2021, 01:05 PM #2
Screw them from the inside of the cabinet with screws that are flush or just under the surface, then cover them with little stick on melamine screw covers. These are available pretty much everywhere.
Nothing succeeds like a budgie without a beak.
-
6th April 2021, 04:16 PM #3GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2018
- Location
- Nsw
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 558
This ^^^ is the standard practice and works just fine
-
6th April 2021, 06:35 PM #4Taking a break
- Join Date
- Aug 2008
- Location
- Melbourne
- Age
- 34
- Posts
- 108
If you want to get really fancy you can get the full FastCap kit to conterbore the sticky caps completely flush with the surface https://www.timbecon.com.au/fastcap-...ole-punch-kits
As long as the screws are countersunk below the surface, you don't even need caps if all you're worried about is not damaging crockery.
-
6th April 2021, 06:39 PM #5GOLD MEMBER
- Join Date
- Apr 2018
- Location
- Nsw
- Age
- 64
- Posts
- 558
-
6th April 2021, 06:41 PM #6Taking a break
- Join Date
- Aug 2008
- Location
- Melbourne
- Age
- 34
- Posts
- 108
Yep, just takes a bit of fiddling to get the depth set juuuust right
-
7th April 2021, 03:41 PM #7
Here’s a stupid suggestion.
Keyhole fittings in the underside of the cupboards.
Screws in the covers.
Problem is you’d need a heap of them and they’d be very fiddly to mark out and get to line up perfectly.
H.
Further thought if the covers are thick enough some dowels/biscuits etc along the rear, in horizontally. Dunno what these hang off. Sheet metal angle?
Maybe neat channel to slip back of cover in and hold it up. Now just support the front. Maggots!?Jimcracks for the rich and/or wealthy. (aka GKB '88)
Bookmarks