They are unfinished Oak Cabinets. The sides of the cabinets are made
of some form of particle board. The piece (base as the store
described it) is also made of oak and is designed to cover the end of
the particle board (Right side of the cabinets). It's basically a
thin piece of oak that is unfinished to cover up the particle board
for aesthetics.
On Aug 14, 1:59 pm, [email protected] wrote:
> They are unfinished Oak Cabinets. The sides of the cabinets are made
> of some form of particle board. The piece (base as the store
> described it) is also made of oak and is designed to cover the end of
> the particle board (Right side of the cabinets). It's basically a
> thin piece of oak that is unfinished to cover up the particle board
> for aesthetics.
I used glue and brad nailer to fasten mine
<[email protected]> wrote in message
> I was wondering what the regular method of attaching this piece to the
> cabinet is? Should it be screwed and then fill in the screw holes,
> nailed, or adhered?
??
AFAICT you do not provide enough information to provide a reasonable answer.
The type of cabinet, type of material, new or old, what you mean by "side
panel (Base)" or "piece"?
IOW, the more specific you are, the more likely you will get an answer that
you can use.
--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 8/8/07
KarlC@ (the obvious)
[email protected] wrote:
>They are unfinished Oak Cabinets. The sides of the cabinets are made
>of some form of particle board. The piece (base as the store
>described it) is also made of oak and is designed to cover the end of
>the particle board (Right side of the cabinets). It's basically a
>thin piece of oak that is unfinished to cover up the particle board
>for aesthetics.
>
>
>
Spots of contact cement is what I found on the cabinets in a previous
home.