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INSIDE PLAN OF BOX
- ROAD-RUNNER LIFTS GLASS OF WATER- PULLING UP MATCH
- MATCH SCRATCHES ON MATCH-BOX
- MATCH LIGHTS FUSE TO TNT
- BOOM!
- HA-HA!!
-WILE E. COYOTE, AUTHOR OF "EVERYTHING I NEEDED TO KNOW IN LIFE, I LEARNED FROM GOLDBERG & MURPHY"
I am American
I have been thinking about this as well.... while on the subject..... I have seen on TV the guys nail a horizontal strip and level it. then sit the cabinets on that and secure them to wall and each other, then remove level strip. I think that must be what happened to OP as his bottoms are not even.... sounds like they just ran them to the ceiling and not bottom level.
... and that's my question....
I want to put some cabs in a laundry room and they will go to ceiling. If my ceiling is not perfectly square, how do you handle that? I can't remember where I saw the video but I know they talked about side wall and ceiling being off. I'm sure they shimmed the side wall,,,, and I think they used crown molding up top but I can't for the life of me remember how they eliminated that visual and kept the cabinets level but not seeing the slightly off ceiling and wall...... which it doesn't take much for the average person to notice.
@skijunkie55 ---- nice ceiling!
No, they drew a level line on the wall, bolted the cabinets together on the floor (the tops are apparently level - we're doing crown molding to take the cabinets all the way to the ceiling) and then hung them as on big ass unit. Of course they put them down on the dirty as crap sub flooring which dented and knocked up the cabinets and chipped the top corner.
I called the company owner who said he'd try to come by first thing but he didn't. The on site boss has been bouncing between job sites leaving the workers to spend time streaming the World Cup on their phones then rushing to get something den by the end of the day.
Don't get me started on the butchering of the HVAC system these guys did. They've been here three days and the re-do's they have to do put us a week behind already.
I would set them off the ceiling ever so slightly and either dont worry about the small gap(im talking 1/4") or use some molding like some 1/4 round or something to take up the gap. I have used the level line on the wall(you have to pick a point to start with) and a ledger board to put cabinets on to aid in hanging them, I dont think there is anything wrong with that personally. Got to have the bottom level, the top you can work with.
Copy Paste from our "Installation Guide" that we send with cabinetry when our own crew doesn't do it.
The base cabinets and tall cabinets typically set the standard for the rest of the installation since they serve as the level foundation for the rest of the cabinetry. Before installation, these cases should be lined up and connected to one another. Some pullouts at the top and bottoms of cases will need to be removed to access the back panels before installation. First, the cabinets should be clamped together for perfect alignment and then connected through the sides by screws. These screws can often be hidden in inconspicuous places such as right below the countertop or beneath pullouts. This method is far more precise than attaching components to the wall separately, one after another.
Once the base cabinets are lined up and connected, your contractor will be able to tell what kind of "shimming" may be needed on the walls and floor. If your floors or walls are at all ‘wavy,’ as is the case in many older homes, shimming will be necessary. The base cabinets are typically provided with a sub toe kick that is intended to be shimmed off the floor by a ¼”. Please don’t skip this important step. Verify the toe kick dimension on the plan and start your shimming with that number in mind. This built in ¼” gap saves you valuable time during install by eliminating the need to scribe each cabinet to the floor. The decorative toe kick or furniture base will later be applied to cover this ¼” gap.
"Restricting the rights of free and law-abiding Americans is not a solution to anything, and only makes government and its force more powerful."
-Gary Johnson
Owner of Wildwood Custom Woodworking, F-Class Rifle Stock Builder
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