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#1
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Changing Kitchen Cabinet Glass
The problem with trying to do this, is that the glass is inserted into a
channel before the door is assembled, and then it's probably glued. It's a shaker door style. They also have one where the glass in inside a mitered frame. The doors are from IKEA, and they are that awful screened glass with the squares on it. Would love to put in a better glass. If their glass doors can't be taken apart, the other option is to buy a solid door, and route it out, but then I would need a matching trim piece in the same wood color. Anyone take apart an IKEA glass kitchen door, and replace the glass? Please also e-mail me, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! |
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#2
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The security code requires that any glass within 40" of a lock be wired or
otherwise unbreakable. (section 1013.2) And locks on an egress door (emergency exit in a fire) must be openable without special knowledge, i.e. no key, no code, just a turn knob. -- Mike Firth Hot Glass Bits Furnace Working Website http://users.ticnet.com/mikefirth/I-UPSUMM.HTM shows recently changed files, click on link "Sheellah" wrote in message ... The problem with trying to do this, is that the glass is inserted into a channel before the door is assembled, and then it's probably glued. It's a shaker door style. They also have one where the glass in inside a mitered frame. The doors are from IKEA, and they are that awful screened glass with the squares on it. Would love to put in a better glass. If their glass doors can't be taken apart, the other option is to buy a solid door, and route it out, but then I would need a matching trim piece in the same wood color. Anyone take apart an IKEA glass kitchen door, and replace the glass? Please also e-mail me, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! |
#3
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Take the doors to a cabinet shop; ask if they can route it out if you have someone
cut out the glass. New glass could be installed with clips or silicone. Dick Baines Rainbow Artistic Glass Sheellah wrote: The problem with trying to do this, is that the glass is inserted into a channel before the door is assembled, and then it's probably glued. It's a shaker door style. They also have one where the glass in inside a mitered frame. The doors are from IKEA, and they are that awful screened glass with the squares on it. Would love to put in a better glass. If their glass doors can't be taken apart, the other option is to buy a solid door, and route it out, but then I would need a matching trim piece in the same wood color. Anyone take apart an IKEA glass kitchen door, and replace the glass? Please also e-mail me, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! |
#4
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Look again.
I've seen lots of kitchen cabinets, and made a few panels for some of them in my time. I have NEVER seen a piece of glass permanently installed in a door frame. I betcha you have overlooked a trim stop, most of them are on the inside. Maybe the seam between the stop and the frame is painted and you just don't see how to get the glass panel out of the door. No reputable cabinet maker would ever install glass in a door while he's making it. Too much chance for breakage in the shop and they need to be able to repair breakage that might occur during shipping.. "Richard Baines" wrote in message ... Take the doors to a cabinet shop; ask if they can route it out if you have someone cut out the glass. New glass could be installed with clips or silicone. Dick Baines Rainbow Artistic Glass Sheellah wrote: The problem with trying to do this, is that the glass is inserted into a channel before the door is assembled, and then it's probably glued. It's a shaker door style. They also have one where the glass in inside a mitered frame. The doors are from IKEA, and they are that awful screened glass with the squares on it. Would love to put in a better glass. If their glass doors can't be taken apart, the other option is to buy a solid door, and route it out, but then I would need a matching trim piece in the same wood color. Anyone take apart an IKEA glass kitchen door, and replace the glass? Please also e-mail me, if kind enough to respond. Thanks! |
#5
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in article , Richard Baines at
wrote on 8/6/03 10:23 PM: New glass could be installed with clips or silicone. What kind of clips are you talking about here? And where to get them? I've been looking for an aesthetic way to make the panels easy to remove and switch around. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#6
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Go he http://www.cshardware.com/ look around, I have been buying from
them for quite a while, good stuff, great prices, and their clear clips are great, don't break off like the cabinet clips from E Hoy, (cheaper too) "ToddD" wrote in message ... in article , Richard Baines at wrote on 8/6/03 10:23 PM: New glass could be installed with clips or silicone. What kind of clips are you talking about here? And where to get them? I've been looking for an aesthetic way to make the panels easy to remove and switch around. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#7
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We have clear plastic screw on clips that attach to the back of the door and
have a short nipple that presses against the glass to secure it. Dick Baines ToddD wrote: in article , Richard Baines at wrote on 8/6/03 10:23 PM: New glass could be installed with clips or silicone. What kind of clips are you talking about here? And where to get them? I've been looking for an aesthetic way to make the panels easy to remove and switch around. -----= Posted via Newsfeeds.Com, Uncensored Usenet News =----- http://www.newsfeeds.com - The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! -----== Over 80,000 Newsgroups - 16 Different Servers! =----- |
#8
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#9
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If the glass is in a slot and the sides were assembled with the glass
in place, there are a couple of possibilities: (1) Disassemble two corners -- espcially nifty if you can make them diagonally opposite. (2) Get someone with a rounter and a small bit that cuts a narrow kerf and have them set up a straight-edge guide (or use a router table) to remove the wood on the inside side to the depth of the notch. This will allow you to remove the old glass. You can then install the new glass and add standard glass retainer clips with short (1/2") sheet-metal screws (probably #6 diameter) to keep the new glass in place, which is what should have been done when the door was made in the first place. Clarke |
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