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Thread: Mounting false drawer fronts

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  1. #1
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    Quote Originally Posted by Sam Murdoch View Post
    Frank, most often I will depend on the pull or a set of knobs to secure the front but sometimes that just isn't adequate. For example I am attaching drawer fronts that are 12" + tall x 34" wide and 11" + tall x 28" wide - I will most definitely add a screw in each corner for these beasty drawers. I set the cams so that they are roughly on or above the horizontal centerline of the drawer box (not of the drawer front as they are not always the same) but on such large fronts I prefer more fasteners. I may be overly concerned - a set of knobs or a long pull, + the cams will certainly hold the location of the drawer front but the corner screws just add to keeping the front and the drawer box together.
    those are quite massive drawer fronts! can totally understand the extra screws in that type of a situation. btw what are they putting in drawers that wide?

  2. #2
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    Not sure I'm comfortable with the term "False" drawer fronts. There is nothing false about them. They are real, and they are in front. I've always heard them referred to as "applied" drawer fronts, versus their more complicated cousins "Integral" drawer fronts. Just semantics, but never try to sell a customer "false" anything, no matter how you attach them.

  3. #3
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    I'm the customer!


  4. #4
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    Quote Originally Posted by Matt Meiser View Post
    I'm the customer!
    My point exactly. You don't want to distance your best customer over a minor semantics issue do you? Every household is different, at mine I'm the manufacturer, I may even be a beneficiary of any home improvements, but the real "customer" is my wife, and she can be a tough customer. Very literal, software engineer. 1's and 0's. Yes or no. True or false. So I'm careful with strong words like "false". Used to be you could apply a French name to anything and it would fly, you could even charge a bit more...like faux paint, but there seems to be an anti francophone sentiment of late that has negated that effect to some extent.

    Do you know the difference between a pizza and a stone pie? About $3.


    Oh, the actual point of my post was that I use the same drill bit and locator system that Sam posted, works well with careful set up, be sure to knock those little buttons in the right direction, with the threaded metal part up, otherwise the screws bottom out and they don't work well, and they sure don't come out easy. DAMHIK. On large "applied fronts" we usually use the buttons for alignment but back it up with a few wood screws from the back through the drawer box. The hardware may come on and off during painting and install, so we don't trust those for anything, and more often than not in my case that is done by others anyway.
    Last edited by Peter Quinn; 09-15-2012 at 7:25 AM.

  5. #5
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    On the flipside Peter, when I want to talk a customer out of something that is going to be fugly, I will slip the term false in there even if I have to make something up.

    " Oh, I know what you mean, I saw those when I was in Home Depot the other day."

    That way at the end of the day we are both happy....

    Larry

  6. #6
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    Quote Originally Posted by frank shic View Post
    those are quite massive drawer fronts! can totally understand the extra screws in that type of a situation. btw what are they putting in drawers that wide?
    Pots & pans, a couple of bread boxes and apparently lots of cereal and biscuits . The fronts are actually taller than the sides as those are cut low (scooped) for easy side access but the drawer box fronts and backs are nearly as tall as the "applied" front.
    "... for when we become in heart completely poor, we at once are the treasurers & disbursers of enormous riches."
    WQJudge

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