this was one of my several errors...i.e. not using what was a square back to square it up and instead nailing the back on and flush cutting back with the router assuming incorrectly it was the back I had made badly.Thank you. I’ve genuinely never ‘squared’ a cabinet; if there’s ever any slight discrepancy, then adding the back to the cabinet squares it up. I’ve never used the ‘5 cut method’ for checking for square. Things are square, not square, or square enough. Which are yours?
edited to say thank you!
Yup was a combination of simplicity but I also thought the full sheet would do a marginally better job of distributing the load above although in reality it won't back a blind bit of difference as the top carcass will be a hanging rail i.e. the weight will be bearing down on the sides regardless.As others said, its to space the cabinet correctly and have a good fixing point for the worktop. Kitchen carcasses generally have a rail about 100mm deep at the front and a rail mounted on the back to strengthen the unit and locate the top of the infil panel.
I'm sure the o.p simply made his carcass as a full box for simplicity. The manufacturers just use rails to save material.
I made a built in unit for our front room last year and used 2 rails on the carcass tops, with a 6mm back panel. I wouldnt be adverse to using a full top, but i managed to save buying an extra sheet, of which i would have only needed maybe a third of..... its only a couple of quid if you've got the material
what you've spotted was the epiphany moment... "corr that wall is quite a bit out" *gets spirit level* ... ah no, that would be my carcass that is outSome excellent advice and reference sources... Often amazed by just what assorted pholks here can and will offer by way of help.
My only 2 cents worth... are that when one views your second picture one can see that the bottom left corner is out a little - let alone what may be happening with the wall; or else that wee "square" is clearly not "square". When I view that picture I note (abet a small) internal vertical error there?
As for fitting the "top" out/over the two sides, rather than inside the two sides that will allow some minor adjustments - if needsd; whereas as you have done it there is no minor adjustment option at all??
I dare say that in the real world it probably makes very little difference when considering normal loads but probably has come down to teams of engineers on the commercial side doing stress tests and working out which method "technically" held out better and I suspect from a commercial assembly perspective it didn't make a blind bit of difference to their process which way they did it so it became the normSeems a lot of bother. A sheet of MDF over the top, rather than in between, much easier to fix with glue and round head nails (pre drilled).
Funnily enough ordered myself a dowel jig last night (in addition to a lot of clamps, clamping squares, engineers squares and other devices to prevent this happening again). My recent usage of pocket holes is almost single handedly due to YouTube/Tiktok videos (mostly US based) of when I've searched up "carcass/wardrobe MDF/plywood assembly" etc. In my limited experience I have found them absolutely fine with MR MDF and a low torque setting on the drill BUT will try it with more clamps on Monday and if I can't get to grips with screwing without a shift I will ditch that process.I think it's been mentioned before in this thread, but pocket hole joints do have a tendency to move slightly when screwing together, and consequently need some sort of clamping while screwing. Dowels, on the other hand, are fairly bulletproof, in my experience.
In my opinion...
Regardless of how that goes, will have a practice with the dowel jig as my very first (free hand) dowels this week went very well and dried to make a very strong bond. I like the fact that with the dowel you not only have something that helps bond the pieces but works brilliantly to line them up for screws as well and I think going forward that might be the better assembly method.
Once again, this has been supremely useful/educational and if I have built in wardrobes that haven't collapse within the year, it's due to the help of every one of you. Thanks!