Results 1 to 4 of 4
Thread: Installing a new kitchen
-
26th August 2004, 04:00 PM #1New Member
- Join Date
- Dec 2003
- Posts
- 4
Installing a new kitchen
Hi
I am about to install a new preassembled kitchen & I am looking for a bit of advice
* Prior to plasterboarding the new kitchen area is it wise to put in extra studdings & noggins
if so where abouts
I was thinking about extra noggins for the wall hanging cupboards
Has anybody got any suggestions?
* Once the walls are plastersheeted. Do the kitchen carcases, screw directly to the studs throught the plaster sheet or are the carcases stood off the walls. If so how much.
I was thinking the carcases may have to stand out from the wall 25mm or so to allow the bench tops to sit flush against the wall.
Again has anybody got any suggestions?
* when you set the kitchen out I assume that the real secret is to get the base plinth dead level. As I'am sitting the base onto a existing tiled floor I assume I have to just plane or sand the premade base plinth until it is dead level. Is that correct?
-
26th August 2004, 04:11 PM #2Senior Member
- Join Date
- Oct 2003
- Location
- Gold Coast,Australia
- Age
- 50
- Posts
- 0
adding extra nogging and studs may help with the placement of overhead cupboards,but generally you dont need to do this.
look into using plastic adjustable feet for the base. you can level the kitchen by wind these up or down and they dont cost that much. then scribe the plinth to the tiled floor,glue with liqid nails and seal it off with silicone.
we generally build a 16mm void into our back carcases just in case the walls run out of square.
-
26th August 2004, 07:26 PM #3Originally Posted by sidk
kind regards
tom armstrong
www.armstrongcabinets.com.au
-
26th August 2004, 09:23 PM #4Intermediate Member
- Join Date
- May 2004
- Location
- Cairns
- Posts
- 30
In regards to your solid plinths (kicks), the easiest way I 've found is as follows.
Place all kicks on the ground where they have to go, and screw any joining sections togethor. Treat all as one big kicker.
Find the highest point and pack up the rest of the kickers to this level using scraps of masonite/laminex (making sure it is level front to back as well.)
Find the biggest gap and scribe a line around base.
Depending how much you have to take off, you may be able to sand off excess, or use electric plane. If planeing beware of going around corners (ie where sides meet face) that you don't "blow" off the adjoining laminex.
Hope this makes sense and is of some help!!
Regards Simon
Bookmarks