Me, too, (I have tried to find them and can't.) I am going to get a business license in a few weeks, so then I will buy them from hafele ... but it has been frustrating that I can't find them anywhere.
Me, too, (I have tried to find them and can't.) I am going to get a business license in a few weeks, so then I will buy them from hafele ... but it has been frustrating that I can't find them anywhere.
Let me complicate this some more.....
What about confirmat screws in regular wood? I am thinking of Using Melamine as the floor of some pullouts that are bound to have a few spills in them. (like an undersink cleaner cabinet). Any issues with them in that? (no experience with Melamine other then crosscutting a few shelves for a friend).
I got a Hafele account only to realize I had to buy 40,000 screws minimum to place an order, which is not bad for a large cabinet shop but quite an investment for my little operation.
I went with Deerfields the 'Ultimates' from Woodworkers Hardware (wwhardware.com). I tested them against the zip-r samples Hafele sent me and if there's a difference I can't find it. I drove screws in and out of test pieces of maple ply and soft maple scraps repeatedly, they work great and don't quit. Prices are $.004 more per screw than Hafele, but you don't have to buy 40,000 to get that price!
I've also used SPAX which I bought from Highland Hardware in a 1000pc box, and those screws grab like nothing I've seen. I think they are a hafele product. They don't have the self drilling points but do have a deeper more agressive thread pattern, teflon coated bodies and thicker shanks. I have yet to find a way to break these screws. They are rated for everything from particle board to concrete penetration! If you need a general purpose military grade bad ass screw SPAX is a good choice.
As far as butt joints and AWI quality standards, that is industry minimum requirement, not typical high quality custom cabinetry. If you want to use 5/8" melamine with screws and butt joints go ahead, but don't try to install that low end condo junk in my home, and don't try to tell me its stronger than dadoes and rabbit and groove. In this case the easiest way and the best way are not the same way. If its for your home, even melamine deserves better treatment.
Not trying to start an argument, but sick of hearing industry minimum standards quoted as if they yielded fine work typical of the craftsmen and craftswomen that populate this site.
When I did all melamine box work I just dado'd everything together. I'd cut additional rabbets and dados for the stretchers and hanging strip so they would be cut at the same size as the deck on a single opening cabinet. When the frame and back are on it's plenty strong enough. To me it's easier to just dado it then it is to use dowels or biscuts. JMO
Speaking of melamine cuts. I was cutting out a corner sink cabinet years ago. The sides had a 45 on one edge. It slipped. Should've gotten stitches. The ONLY thing I miss about melamine is the consistent thickness.
BTW- Spit/saliva is the best thing I've found for cleaning blood off of melamine.
Richard, I have a contractors license and a DBA so I could just order them but I normally use the screws from quick screw or WW supply. WW supply calls them assembly screws and they are essentially the same thing.
Deep threads, smaller shank than the threads, almost unbreakable, counter sink nibs and a #17 auger point. As long as it has those it will do the same thing just as well.
Zip'r is a just a brand from Hafele.
http://www.hafele.com/us/external/ca...rs/447-462.pdf
see page 452
I prefer the #8's over the #9's since it seems to leave more material. The screw isn't the weak point in the system.
Joe
JC Custom WoodWorks
For best results, try not to do anything stupid.
"So this is how liberty dies...with thunderous applause." - Padmé Amidala "Star Wars III: The Revenge of the Sith"
I was trying to get som #6 screws and could not find these in Assembly screws. Hafele has #6 Zip'r but I can't buy from them since I don't yet have a business license.
Anyone here whos still reading this know how much a cabinet shop will approximately pay for 5x10x3/4 melamine in Taupe. I can get 36 sheets in taupe brand new for $5 each. I was wondering If I could keep 10 and sell 25 or so and make all my money back plus gas about $50.
Dunn was selling 4x8s for 30.00 plus tax. Think a shop may be paying 20?
I might have been confused but I think #6's in zip'rs from hafele require a very large order, like 120,000 screws, which leads me to think they are a special order. All the #6's I put in my cart above 3/4" required a very large minimum order. I've been using #8's from deerfield as they don't seem to have #6's either.
I order from Hafele all the time and I can assure you an order of screws does not have to be astronomical. They show pricing in the thousands but will sell in much smaller lots. Just ordered 1,ooo of the #6 Zip-r screws a week ago.
I'll have to call them. Using the online store I couldn't put anything in my cart below 40,000 screws, and #6's were over 100,000 screws. They have the best prices for that type of screw. Do you order online or by phone?
Yoshi,
I’m going to be building lower and upper carcasses out of cheap melamine particle board. My original plan was to use dados for glue surface (and alignment) and staples for the initial construction then reinforce with confirmat screws.
Based on your diagram, I can see that there’d be the same amount of wood-to-wood glue surface as there would be using a dado, and alignment would be a lot easier as well. I’m pretty sure I’m going to switch over to your method, but I have a few questions.
Where did you shoot your staples, and how long? If I aim for the edge of the female groove (staples parallel to it… only 3/8”), will it blow out the male tongue? Or will it just “tighten” the joint?
How did you do your backs?
Thanks.
Peter I usually order by phone but the Hafele rep stops by my shop at least once a month. Their website is horrible, don't waste your time with it.
"Where did you shoot your staples, and how long?"
I have an "M" series Senco stapler that shoots a 3/8" crown staple. I used 1.5" length. The stapler really powered the staples so the joints got sucked down pretty tight. Staples were shot right into the center of the joint.
rabbet_groove.gif
One additional advantage of using this joint was that, because melamine panels vary in thickness, getting precise carcase widths was always difficult. So when the groove was milled, it was done on an overhead router so that the remaining thickness of material at the bottom of the groove was always "the same". This provided much better control over finished width. We're only talking a "skosh" here but if you gain a "skosh" on each cab and you have a run of four or five or more units, the difference can add up to a significant error.
YM
PS As I mentioned previously I am a card carrying member of MUA ("Melamine Users Anonymous") I have been "clean" for ten years now....
Last edited by David DeCristoforo; 04-04-2008 at 12:27 PM.