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One fundamental rule applies to the installation of just about anything: If you get the first piece right, the others fall into position. Misplace the first piece, however, and you’re likely to experience a series of headaches as you work towards completing the job. This is as true for hanging wallpaper as it is for laying brick. And it’s a lesson that deserves special attention from DIYers trying to install base cabinets in the kitchen renovation, laundry room makeover, or bathroom redo.
You are watching: How To: Install Base Cabinets
An uneven floor will lead to uneven base cabinets, and you won’t appreciate how crooked they appear next to level upper cabinets (not to mention items rolling around behind closed doors). Find the highest point in the floor by drawing or snapping a level chalk line along the adjacent wall, then measure down to the floor in several places. The spot where you measure the shortest distance is where the floor is highest. Later in the process, you are going to shim cabinets up to this height because that’s easier than subtracting height from a cabinet.
Read more : Standard Counter Height and Why You May Want to Break the Rule
This height assumes that it’s a finished floor and that you want a standard countertop height of 36 inches.
Use vertical lines to the floor to denote the locations of the different cabinet units. Meanwhile, find the studs along the cabinet wall and mark them. Keep in mind, you must still be able to see the marks even after the base cabinets are in place, so make them plainly visible and draw them past the top line.
Set your base cabinets against the wall where you will install them, and add shims beneath the cabinetry so that its top edge hits the first horizontal line that you drew.
Read more : Dining Table Seating Capacity – Round, Rectangular & Square
In situations where the wall is not plumb (i.e. vertical at a 90-degree angle to the floor as determine by a plumb bob), it may be necessary to close the gap between the base cabinets and the wall with filler strips. Use this wood material—which is often available to purchase from the same place you picked up the cabinets—to shim behind the cabinets at stud locations. Then, drill and countersink pilot holes and use 2½-inch screws to anchor the cabinets (through the filler strip) into the studs.
Having installed the initial cabinet, move on to the next one. Continue to shim as necessary. To ensure a flush fit between this unit and its neighbor, join the two with a clamp. Then, drill and countersink four pilot holes and attach with screws. Proceed to install the other base cabinets along the wall by repeating steps 4 and 5.
Now that you’ve installed the base cabinets on the walls, finish the closed storage by attaching the doors and setting drawers into their tracks.
Source: https://gardencourte.com
Categories: Kitchens
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