Once the doors were sanded, I set on installing them. As I had previously dry fit each door with a single screw, the final fitting was fairly straightforward. I clamped the door to the hinge and sunk a screw into the hole from the dry fit.
From there I alternated between my drill and screw gun, pre-drilling and screwing as I worked my choice down the hinges.
They installed fairly quickly and as the screws are set in the end and back faces of the ¾ baltic birch door panels, they seem more than strong enough.Unfortunately, theyre also uneven. The left door sits about ? higher than the right. I suspect that the unevenness was present and would have been noticed during my dry fit, had I had the presence of mind to check. As this point, Im not 100% sure how bad the unevenness is (could be from racking of the carcass) and what Im going to do about it (if anything). At this point Im going to wait until I hang the cabinet on the wall and then Ill see how the doors are sitting relative to each other with the cabinet hanging naturally. If its still choice off, I may try to clean it up.
Does your tolerance for error grow as project completion approaches too?
A sanded door. |
Doors Ahoy! |
So close, and yet . . . not. |
Other Bastard Wall Cabinet PostsWinter Wall Cabinet WonderlandThe Bastard Wall Cabinet (for tools!)Trudging Towards Tool StorageCutting the Cabinet Carcass (in relative terms)A Home For My PlanesContinued Wall Cabinet AssemblyWhats a Bastard Wall Cabinet without Shelves?
Boxing in the Bastard Tool Cabinet
Door Hinges on the Bastard Wall Cabinet
Oh, You Mean That Was Supposed To Lift?
Door Tops & Bottoms
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