This is a very basic beginner question. I need to replace half a dozen
Blum hinges on the kitchen cabinet doors. These are recessed Blum
hinges. They are held in their pockets by two small screws. I am
afraid that when I replace the hinges they won't be held securely since
the screws will go into the existing holes. What can be done to make
sure the new screws hold the hinges securely even though they are
screwed into the old holes?
Thanks!
>
> Grin - been there, done that, can't find the darn extras when I need
> them. Oh well...... grin :)
Actually, I found via Blum website that their hinges have lifetime
warranty and they will replace them free of charge if they malfunction.
All you need to do is go to their website, print out the form, remove
the broken hinges and mail them along with the form to the Blum. They
will send you back the replacement in 2 business days. Now, that's
what I call a warranty! We'll see if that will work smoothly.
Locutus wrote:
> You had half of a dozen hinges fail? I don't believe I have ever seen a
> cabinet hinge fail...
>
> They get old and ugly, but I don't think Blum would replace them in that
> case. :)
Believe it or not but they did fail. The hinges that I have are
designed to close the kitchen cabinet doors and keep them closed. That
mechanism failed in some of them and the doors do not stay closed but
rather a little ajar. They would also not get closed if you release
them. Otherwise they hold the doors pretty strong.
The reason they failed is because some little plastic part cracked and
fell out. I think that part is located on the pin and forces the door
closed via some spring action.
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> This is a very basic beginner question. I need to replace half a dozen
> Blum hinges on the kitchen cabinet doors. These are recessed Blum
> hinges. They are held in their pockets by two small screws. I am
> afraid that when I replace the hinges they won't be held securely since
> the screws will go into the existing holes. What can be done to make
> sure the new screws hold the hinges securely even though they are
> screwed into the old holes?
>
> Thanks!
>
Just because they are old screw holes it does not mean they are "bad". If
the screws for the new hinges are the same size, or slightly larger, you
shouldnt have a problem.
<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> >
>> Grin - been there, done that, can't find the darn extras when I need
>> them. Oh well...... grin :)
>
> Actually, I found via Blum website that their hinges have lifetime
> warranty and they will replace them free of charge if they malfunction.
> All you need to do is go to their website, print out the form, remove
> the broken hinges and mail them along with the form to the Blum. They
> will send you back the replacement in 2 business days. Now, that's
> what I call a warranty! We'll see if that will work smoothly.
>
You had half of a dozen hinges fail? I don't believe I have ever seen a
cabinet hinge fail...
They get old and ugly, but I don't think Blum would replace them in that
case. :)
On 29 Aug 2006 07:43:14 -0700, [email protected] wrote:
>This is a very basic beginner question. I need to replace half a dozen
>Blum hinges on the kitchen cabinet doors. These are recessed Blum
>hinges. They are held in their pockets by two small screws. I am
>afraid that when I replace the hinges they won't be held securely since
>the screws will go into the existing holes. What can be done to make
>sure the new screws hold the hinges securely even though they are
>screwed into the old holes?
>
>Thanks!
Assuming you really do need to fix the screw holes, one technique
(after removing those hinges) would be to apply some yellow glue to
wooden toothpicks and shove them into the existing screw holes. Wait
for the glue to dry then trim the part of the toothpicks that's
protruding flush. Then place your hinge into the pockets and replace
the screws.
On Tue, 29 Aug 2006 13:28:59 -0400, [email protected] wrote:
>
>When we replaced some broken cabinet hinges I remember that it
>was a bear to find the correct exact drop in replacement, so much
>of a bear that I bought several extra that I will probably never
>need. (but IF I do, I got 'em!)
>
>Steve
Grin - been there, done that, can't find the darn extras when I need
them. Oh well...... grin :)
[email protected] spake thusly and wrote:
>This is a very basic beginner question. I need to replace half a dozen
>Blum hinges on the kitchen cabinet doors. These are recessed Blum
>hinges. They are held in their pockets by two small screws. I am
>afraid that when I replace the hinges they won't be held securely since
>the screws will go into the existing holes. What can be done to make
>sure the new screws hold the hinges securely even though they are
>screwed into the old holes?
If you are careful it should not be a problem. It is important
to be careful that you have the exact replacement hinge for your
cabinets. If a hole in the wood is stripped there are several
methods of recovery (I will leave that to the experts here).
When we replaced some broken cabinet hinges I remember that it
was a bear to find the correct exact drop in replacement, so much
of a bear that I bought several extra that I will probably never
need. (but IF I do, I got 'em!)
Steve
--
www.sellcom.com for firewood splitters, ergonomic chairs,
office phone systems, "non-mov" surge protection, Exabyte,
CA, Minuteman, Brave Products, Fisch, TMC, Panasonic and more
Check out http://www.guardian.name
Using yellow glue, insert the tips of either wooden matches
or tooth picks in the holes. You have to play with which
works the best. Trim with a utility knife to be flush.
After the glue dries(few hours), the screws
will have new material to bite into.
You can do the same thing with wood putty but it
gets a LOT more messy.
[email protected] wrote:
> This is a very basic beginner question. I need to replace half a dozen
> Blum hinges on the kitchen cabinet doors. These are recessed Blum
> hinges. They are held in their pockets by two small screws. I am
> afraid that when I replace the hinges they won't be held securely since
> the screws will go into the existing holes. What can be done to make
> sure the new screws hold the hinges securely even though they are
> screwed into the old holes?
>
> Thanks!
>