The Bear":3mjpadti said:
I was amazed by how many were supposed to be premium products and were truly awful. One of the most common problems was being able to see the locks between the frame and casement. Some of the gaps were huge. Some hid the locks with a weather seal.
It's a real jungle out there, there's plenty of companies charging a fortune for their products with all the flash buzzwords and pamphlets to match but the construction is seriously questionable at best. In my opinion, you're best off avoiding most companies that would be in a show because their #1 aim is to make money, not a good product. Try hunting out the smaller joinery shops that the big companies often call "cowboys" you'll find some making extremely high-quality bespoke stuff for a fair price.
I worked for a local company for a short time, they advertised themselves as "
the premium" joinery manufacturer. I saw more dodgy workmanship there in 3 months than I have seen anywhere before or since, somehow accidentally cutting off a tenon entirely when cutting haunches and sticking the door together regardless kind of dodgy workmanship. And some very questionable construction methods which relied too much on glue, modern glues are very good but I wouldn't trust them entirely to make up for shoddy quality joinery. Everything was rapidly produced, doors, for example, had a sloppy fit blind tenon which went about halfway into the stile, the door was glued and cramped in a hydraulic press, nails were fired through the face into the tenon, nail holes filled with car body filler and then the door was removed out of the press and set aside. They charged far more than any other joiner in the area and the business was built purely on salesman boll-ox really. They also treated staff terribly so there was a massive turn-over of staff which resulted in someone new there every few weeks and someone leaving every few weeks, you can't build a quality product if you've got no expertise built up within the company and you're relying on unskilled workers to get the work done. Fortunately, it seems they've actually drained the local employment catchment area and apparently they're really struggling for staff, serves them right.
The absolute best staircase work I ever saw done was by a guy who worked out of a humble workshop filled with very old gear, no advertising all through word of mouth, barely could call himself a company really, made the staircases in the workshop and went onto site with a plastic bucket filled with his tools and put them in with a helper. The most unassuming person in the world to talk to honestly :lol: , but his craftsmanship was really the utmost top-level, I couldn't hold a candle to it. Very complex curved string and balustrade work that I simply could not fathom trying to work out let alone actually build, and every single little detail is perfect and I've got a pretty keen eye for spotting a flaw. From what I understood he wasn't the cheapest but he also wasn't the most expensive, as I said, It was absolutely perfect which is worth paying the extra for so long as you're actually getting perfection and not a bunch of salesman malarkey.
Want a good job? Find the quiet unassuming guy making windows in a farm shed or something like that somewhere