WC

"W CHAN"

11/12/2004 9:43 AM

knife hinges versus euro hinges

I'm in the process of building an entertainment center and was going to use
blum euro hinges on some inset bi-fold doors. Due to the nature of the euro
hinges, in order to make the doors fold "flat", I would have to make one of
the doors narrower than the other to work around the euro hinge cup. This
would make of an asymmetrical door layout that's not acceptable. I wanted to
hide the hinges if possible.

Now, I'm looking at knife hinges, but I have a few questions.

How hard is it to install knife hinges "right"? I've never done them before
How much load can they handle? I'm looking to use them on 3/4" thick frame
and panel doors that measure 58" tall by 15" wide each. With both doors,
it's 58"x30" wide.

Any other thoughts? Or would it make more sense to stick with the euro
hinges and live with the doors not being able to fold flat and adjust the
interior cabinet width to accomodate the offset taken by the euro hinge?

Thanks,
Winthrop


This topic has 3 replies

RS

"Rick Samuel"

in reply to "W CHAN" on 11/12/2004 9:43 AM

11/12/2004 10:50 AM

www.youngdale.com doing a kitchen w/ them. Works great.

LJ

Larry Jaques

in reply to "W CHAN" on 11/12/2004 9:43 AM

11/12/2004 3:24 PM

On Sat, 11 Dec 2004 10:50:47 -0600, "Rick Samuel" <[email protected]>
calmly ranted:

>www.youngdale.com doing a kitchen w/ them. Works great.

That sounds like Bob Youngdale's manufacturing company.

Bob was my bestest buddy in school. We traveled around in his
Cadillac Coupe De Ville camper that he and his dad built. What
a hoot, haulin' ass up the mountain grades at 70mph whilst
getting tripletakes from everyone we passed. You'd think nobody
had seen an 8' cabover Cadillac before. I was in awe of his
family machine shop over in San Marcos when we were in school.
They made very good hinges. He started his own company after
the other half of the family took over the biz when his dad
retired.

Pass on a "Hi!" from me if you talk to him again.


==============================================================
Like peace and quiet? Buy a phoneless cord.
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==============================================================

ER

"Eric Ryder"

in reply to "W CHAN" on 11/12/2004 9:43 AM

11/12/2004 6:00 PM

I use a fair number of knife hinges on overlay doors. They drop into a dado
that will show on the door edge, so that's a consideration. I also find
that they wear fairly quickly (from the exposed bearing surfaces?) FWIW,
these are mostly Youngdales.

"W CHAN" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:6jzud.2493$Zn6.2237@trnddc08...
> I'm in the process of building an entertainment center and was going to
> use blum euro hinges on some inset bi-fold doors. Due to the nature of the
> euro hinges, in order to make the doors fold "flat", I would have to make
> one of the doors narrower than the other to work around the euro hinge
> cup. This would make of an asymmetrical door layout that's not acceptable.
> I wanted to hide the hinges if possible.
>
> Now, I'm looking at knife hinges, but I have a few questions.
>
> How hard is it to install knife hinges "right"? I've never done them
> before
> How much load can they handle? I'm looking to use them on 3/4" thick frame
> and panel doors that measure 58" tall by 15" wide each. With both doors,
> it's 58"x30" wide.
>
> Any other thoughts? Or would it make more sense to stick with the euro
> hinges and live with the doors not being able to fold flat and adjust the
> interior cabinet width to accomodate the offset taken by the euro hinge?
>
> Thanks,
> Winthrop
>


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