I'm building a kitchen cabinet for my sister. She wants a single glass
door. With a 2.5" frame the glass will be ~14 x 35". My initial thought is
that size of glass will be fairly heavy and that 2 doors would be better.
Espically when all the (ab)use a kitchen cabinet door takes over the years.
Any thoughts? Maybe a 3 or 3.5" frame would be better if a single door is
the way to go. I've done plenty of cabinets and doors -- just none with
glass.
On Wednesday, September 3, 2014 11:25:29 PM UTC-5, Lew Hodgett wrote:
> ------------------------------------------------------------
>
> Talk to your glass supplier for a specific glass type recommendation.
>
>
>
> Once that's done, the rest of the job is in your wheelhouse.
>
>
>
> Have fun.
>
>
>
> Lew
Agree. The glass they recommend probably won't weigh more than a wood panel that would be in the door if it wasn't glass.
Robert
On 9/3/2014 10:06 PM, yes wrote:
> I'm building a kitchen cabinet for my sister. She wants a single glass
> door. With a 2.5" frame the glass will be ~14 x 35". My initial thought is
> that size of glass will be fairly heavy and that 2 doors would be better.
> Espically when all the (ab)use a kitchen cabinet door takes over the years.
> Any thoughts? Maybe a 3 or 3.5" frame would be better if a single door is
> the way to go. I've done plenty of cabinets and doors -- just none with
> glass.
>
Mayhaps Shakespeare, the Bard, said it best... "Much ado, about nothing..."
In our kitchen we have a single cabinet with a glass door. (accent piece
in the corner)
31" x 11.5" glass inset on a 2 3/8 rail/stile door. Three regular
hinges. Going on 11 years new and nary a problem.
"yes" wrote:
> I'm building a kitchen cabinet for my sister. She wants a single
> glass
> door. With a 2.5" frame the glass will be ~14 x 35". My initial
> thought is
> that size of glass will be fairly heavy and that 2 doors would be
> better.
> Espically when all the (ab)use a kitchen cabinet door takes over the
> years.
> Any thoughts? Maybe a 3 or 3.5" frame would be better if a single
> door is
> the way to go. I've done plenty of cabinets and doors -- just none
> with
> glass.
------------------------------------------------------------
Talk to your glass supplier for a specific glass type recommendation.
Once that's done, the rest of the job is in your wheelhouse.
Have fun.
Lew
On 09/03/2014 08:25 PM, Lew Hodgett wrote:
> Talk to your glass supplier for a specific glass type recommendation.
>
Just make sure you have an easy way to replace the glass should it get
broken down the line...
--
Kevin Miller
Juneau, Alaska
http://www.alaska.net/~atftb
"In the history of the world, no one has ever washed a rented car."
- Lawrence Summers
On 9/4/2014 12:43 PM, Kevin Miller wrote:
> On 09/03/2014 08:25 PM, Lew Hodgett wrote:
>> Talk to your glass supplier for a specific glass type recommendation.
>>
> Just make sure you have an easy way to replace the glass should it get
> broken down the line...
>
>
That is what your glass company is for. Let them put it in and replace
it should it ever break. It's what they do. ;~)
On 9/4/2014 5:04 AM, [email protected] wrote:
> On Wednesday, September 3, 2014 11:25:29 PM UTC-5, Lew Hodgett wrote:
>> ------------------------------------------------------------
>>
>> Talk to your glass supplier for a specific glass type recommendation.
>>
>>
>>
>> Once that's done, the rest of the job is in your wheelhouse.
>>
>>
>>
>> Have fun.
>>
>>
>>
>> Lew
>
> Agree. The glass they recommend probably won't weigh more than a wood panel that would be in the door if it wasn't glass.
>
> Robert
>
My pantry glass was much heavier than the panel, 3/16" Flemish glass.
;~) BUT the method of attachment will be the key to strength. Attached
with adhesive and the glass adds strength. Floating and the glass is
dead weight. The real factor is to use enough hinges to handle the
weight if the door ends up heavier.
On 9/3/2014 10:06 PM, yes wrote:
> I'm building a kitchen cabinet for my sister. She wants a single glass
> door. With a 2.5" frame the glass will be ~14 x 35". My initial thought is
> that size of glass will be fairly heavy and that 2 doors would be better.
> Espically when all the (ab)use a kitchen cabinet door takes over the years.
> Any thoughts? Maybe a 3 or 3.5" frame would be better if a single door is
> the way to go. I've done plenty of cabinets and doors -- just none with
> glass.
>
Built properly 2" rails and stiles are more than adequate. I build my
doors with a rabbet recess on the back side and my glass guy uses a
clear silicone based adhesive to attach the glass from the back side in
side that rabbet. The glass in the link below is Flemmish style and is
thicker than normal, 3/16" thick. If the glass is attached with an
adhesive the glass adds strength to the door frame. Our pantry cabinet
doors are 18" x 32". I would suggest using at least 3 hinges to handle
the added weight if the hinges are not strong to begin with. I used
Blum Euro style hinges and 2 was plenty. The pantry is 8' x 8'.
Here is the pantry and the back side of the door.
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/6485169773/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/6485170125/in/photostream/
Another sample with larger doors and thinner glass
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/7096671845/
https://www.flickr.com/photos/lcb11211/6950596744/in/photostream/