The above is a good idea but if you have a plug cutter you can make your own dowel so when you screw into it, it will into the side grain instead of the end grain. But that is possibly being a little over-anal over the above suggestion for most instances unless you don't have any dowels then it's a pretty cool idea.You can glue in dowels into the edge of the MDF and then screw into those.
Yes but the dowels should be at least 25 mm long and plugs that length tend to break. An 8 mm dowel is probably optimum in 18 mm MDF. Careful matching of the screw hole to the screws will prevent splitting of the MDF.The above is a good idea but if you have a plug cutter you can make your own dowel so when you screw into it, it will into the side grain instead of the end grain. But that is possibly being a little over-anal over the above suggestion for most instances unless you don't have any dowels then it's a pretty cool idea.
I have done exactly the same, then decided to organise a burr/nick in othe edge of the entry hole. That puts a nice groove down the dowel. A little bit less fidly than using some cutting device.I also made small grooves in the dowel using corner of a chisel to give glue a path out.
My instructor called this a dowel plate. He told me to leave the hole exactly as it left the drill, and drive the dowel in from the ragged side.... Incidentally as a furniture restorer, I have often made dowels by drilling a 6mm thick piece of steel the required diameter then roughly trimming a piece of wood to size then hammering through the plate, much easier and quicker than it sounds! ...
Depends on the size of your door, butt hinges can be just fine in MDF.
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