Cabinetman
Established Member
Another aspect of these units, is what it would cost you to learn what you learnt when you tried to fit those hinges, I suspect that they weren’t designed for that particular application, which is why you had to take a chunk off the back of the doors where they fit and also add those thickening pieces to the sides of the cabinet where the hinges fit, and then, to enable you to get the shelves in and out you had to put grooves across those thickening pieces. I can see you’ve had a right game fitting them!
Having the grain flow across all four doors like that is very nice indeed. I can’t remember the last time I bought any elm, but if it was oak I would expect to pay about £200 for the timber, I Think it would take two days to go from rough sawn to ready to fit panels and probably another day finishing and fitting hinges and shelf brackets three days at £250 plus the £250 for the frame so really a minimum £1000 in total for the two cabinets. And that’s mates rates, you have to add on organising the metal frames, collecting them, going for the timber, scratching your head time. Plus contingency fund for the jobs that don’t go to plan, you couldn’t really do them for less than £1500 for the two as one-offs. Ian
Having the grain flow across all four doors like that is very nice indeed. I can’t remember the last time I bought any elm, but if it was oak I would expect to pay about £200 for the timber, I Think it would take two days to go from rough sawn to ready to fit panels and probably another day finishing and fitting hinges and shelf brackets three days at £250 plus the £250 for the frame so really a minimum £1000 in total for the two cabinets. And that’s mates rates, you have to add on organising the metal frames, collecting them, going for the timber, scratching your head time. Plus contingency fund for the jobs that don’t go to plan, you couldn’t really do them for less than £1500 for the two as one-offs. Ian