Attaching a French cleat to kitchen cabinets

UKworkshop.co.uk

Help Support UKworkshop.co.uk:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.

LarryS.

Established Member
Joined
20 Nov 2007
Messages
1,072
Reaction score
24
Hi, I've got some kitchen cabinets from the original kitchen in our house which are made out of chipboard and I want to use them for the garage .

I've tried attaching a French cleat to the top surface through the back but this is inherently weak, is there a best practice way ?

Thanks


Paul
72d3579f91a5f2418b66b2ae9566328d.jpg


Sent from my SM-G903F using Tapatalk
 
I can't comment on french cleats exactly but when I fit cabinets like this to the wall I don't trust the manufacturer fittings alone, I add fixing at teh bottom of the cabinet too. I cut a piece of wood to fit in the recess at the back making it flush to the frame. I glue it to the hardboard back and frame edge then screw from underneath the frame into this cleat. When the cabinet is hung and level on the supplied fittings I then screw through the back of the cabinet and the cleat into the wall behind. The result is a cabinet that a child could climb into even when full of crockery.

With regard to your cabinet, could you put the cleat in the recess or somehow fit in a similar manner to what I describe? The combo of wide glue surface area and screws makes for a very strong joint even on chipboard and hardboard.
 
Can't you just fix them to the wall the normal way? I don't know a lot about French cleats but won't the cupboard slope forward when that's mounted on the wall?
Best way would be to cut a piece of ply to fit the recess in the back of the cabinet, glue and screw that in and then fit the cleat to that.
 
Dont like that idea for workshop cupboards, all manner of creepy crawlies and vermin can nest back there in the warm and dark.

Use the "drill a hole and bang the plug through and tighten the screw" fixings (dont know the technical name)
Put one in each corner inside the cupboard and you can load it up with tools with no fear of mice eating their way in from the rear.
 
Thanks all for the ideas and thoughts , I do like the French cleats so I can rearrange the cupboards . I'll be out there tonight with my phone weighing up the options you've all suggested for practicality terms and will update you once I've made my choice

Thanks again


Paul

Sent from my SM-G903F using Tapatalk
 

Latest posts

Back
Top