I am making a mirrored door for a recess in a bathroom wall that I want to turn into a cabinet and I have a question about concealed hinges.
The hinge I want to use has a boss depth of 12.6mm and it says to drill the 35mm hole to a depth of 12.7mm.
Now I want to keep the door as thin as possible, and I was hoping to use 12mm ply or HDF, and have a 4mm mirror glued to the front. This would give me a door profile of c.17mm
I am wondering if it would be possible to drill the boss hole right through the 12mm door, and then fit the hinges which would then protrude through by 0.6mm. I would then stick the mirror onto the front of the door, using enough gear so that the adhesive layer was about 1mm thick, which would seem to provide enough space for the protruding hinge bosses.
The door is going to be about 900mm x 460mm, and I am thinking that if I use 3 hinges that this should provide enough strength to hold it all.
I suppose my question is about where the stresses are with BLUM hinges - is it the sides of the circular boss that take the strain, or is the flat circle surface of the boss integral to how these hinges work.
Picture attached for clarity - any help would be appreciated.
[I also had the idea of simply using a double sided mirror as a door using the BLUM Cristallo hinges. This would look great as it would just look like a mirror was attached to the wall - but am worried that this might be fragile and also the quote I got was around the £200 mark for the glass & hinges, which seemed kind of steep]
Thank you
Robert