Built in wardrobes. What's the best way to place wardrobe doors back to back on a 19mm (veneered) mdf panel without shifting the hinges up/down. The problem is of the hinge fixing screws getting in each others way if the hinges are fixed on opposite sides of the same panel.
My idea, is to use m4 csk bolts, with the female section of an interscrew, that had the head cut off, joining them (the hinges) inside the panel.
Alternative is to fix 2 mdf panels B2B and use standard 0° crank hinges, which would be wasteful on materials as I'd be burying 2 sides of oak veneer in the panel construction.
Or is there a better way?
Other tricky one is in the pic below (not to scale), the wardrobe will be fitted in the shaded area of the room, and there's an alcove that measures 580W x 300D. Don't want to have dead space behind the wardrobes, could set that part of the wardrobe back into the alcove, client has indicated that they would like some kind of pull out system, bringing the contents of the cupboard into the room. (they currently have a freestanding clothes rail which sits in the alcove, it's so overloaded the wheels get stuck in the carpet when you try to roll it)
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My idea, is to use m4 csk bolts, with the female section of an interscrew, that had the head cut off, joining them (the hinges) inside the panel.
Alternative is to fix 2 mdf panels B2B and use standard 0° crank hinges, which would be wasteful on materials as I'd be burying 2 sides of oak veneer in the panel construction.
Or is there a better way?
Other tricky one is in the pic below (not to scale), the wardrobe will be fitted in the shaded area of the room, and there's an alcove that measures 580W x 300D. Don't want to have dead space behind the wardrobes, could set that part of the wardrobe back into the alcove, client has indicated that they would like some kind of pull out system, bringing the contents of the cupboard into the room. (they currently have a freestanding clothes rail which sits in the alcove, it's so overloaded the wheels get stuck in the carpet when you try to roll it)
View media item 27151