From this drawing how many mm short do I need to cut

From this drawing how many mm short do I need to cut

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Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Saturday 11th April 2009
quotequote all
Hi clever DIYers
I am going to fit two glass doors to a cabinate to tidy it up as it is doorless at the moment

I am confused as to the dimentions I need to get teh glass cut.in the verticle in another picture it clearly says 3.5mm to to bottom so 7mm but not sure how short
in the horisontal.

Hope that makes sense



Edited by Pesty on Sunday 12th April 00:06

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
here for you all to laugh at is my very very quick drawing I only have paint and i can't use it.
I hang my head in shame as I passed engineering drawing with distinction smile

anyway laugh away guys. the question may make more sense with this I have left 1mm at either edge and 2mm in the middle

Its the 1mm at the edges that I am wondering about should it be more? or maybe it isnt even nessesary at all?





Edited by Pesty on Sunday 12th April 00:12

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
this is where I get the 3.5mm reduction from top and bottom



Thanks in advance

Edited by Pesty on Sunday 12th April 00:05

robinhood21

30,796 posts

234 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Hmm, seems to me that the drawing of the hinge does not give the measurement of the thickness of the back of the hinge. Just measure this and subtract from the overall measurement plus the 2mm that you have already allowed. I think. smile

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Yeah that would make sense cheers.

I have ordered them. not here yet though.

I have to find somewhere that will cut me two pieces of glass to size.

Big Al.

68,958 posts

260 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
IIRC if you are using the glass on display type cabinets the panels must be toughened. I would imaging that you would also want them edge ground for safety.

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
edge ground ok cheers, Yes will specify toughened glass. I'm bound to smash it other wise

Simpo Two

85,833 posts

267 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Pesty said:
I have ordered them. not here yet though.
I'd wait until you get the hinges so you can be sure.

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Yes will do.

In that last pic it looks like there is hardly any gap between the edge of the glass and the side of the cabinate. Thats why I decided 1mm at the thickness if the metal.

Thanks for the help. looks like I havnt missed anything vital. Once the hinges arrive will measure them. Just needed a little confidence as that first drawing had me confused.

It will probaly all still go wrong anyway. There is no way I can drill/screw 8 screws in and have them all line up square smile
worth a try as its a nice cabinate and matches the desk. the Mrs thinks its untidy

Simpo Two

85,833 posts

267 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Pesty said:
worth a try as its a nice cabinate
redcardcop I'm sorry but I'm going to have to reveal my membership of the PH Spellynge Police at this point and caution you against the spelling of 'cabinet'. Anything you type may be used against you as evidence if you do not etc etc...

Edited by Simpo Two on Sunday 12th April 13:59

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Its a fair cop gov.

Guilty as charged, please take into account my tough life in the North when sentencing

allegro

1,141 posts

206 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Do yourself a favour and take your drawings the the glass place and get their advice. most glass places cut to a tolerence of +/- 2/3mm so if you make it too tight and they cut it 3mm bigger you are knackered. if you explain what you want most places are quite helpful and are used to working with such fittings

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Good idea

Thanks

Big Al.

68,958 posts

260 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
allegro said:
Do yourself a favour and take your drawings the the glass place and get their advice. most glass places cut to a tolerence of +/- 2/3mm so if you make it too tight and they cut it 3mm bigger you are knackered. if you explain what you want most places are quite helpful and are used to working with such fittings
Or make a template out of a same thickness MDF sheet it only costs pence.

When you are happy with the form, fit and function take said template to Glaziers as a pattern. You might also want to check about the holes in the glass, who is going to put them in?

Simpo Two

85,833 posts

267 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
allegro said:
Do yourself a favour and take your drawings the the glass place and get their advice. most glass places cut to a tolerence of +/- 2/3mm
That seems pretty poor to me - why can't they do +/- 1mm? Don't they have rulers?

steve_amv8

1,889 posts

212 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Big Al. said:
allegro said:
Do yourself a favour and take your drawings the the glass place and get their advice. most glass places cut to a tolerence of +/- 2/3mm so if you make it too tight and they cut it 3mm bigger you are knackered. if you explain what you want most places are quite helpful and are used to working with such fittings
Or make a template out of a same thickness MDF sheet it only costs pence.

When you are happy with the form, fit and function take said template to Glaziers as a pattern. You might also want to check about the holes in the glass, who is going to put them in?
Looking at the pic, this type of hinge bracket doesn't require a hole in the glass - the little screw you see is a grub screw that tightens against the glass, gripping it between the screw end and the other part of the hinge.

Pesty

Original Poster:

42,655 posts

258 months

Sunday 12th April 2009
quotequote all
Big Al. said:
or make a template out of a same thickness MDF sheet it only costs pence.

When you are happy with the form, fit and function take said template to Glaziers as a pattern. You might also want to check about the holes in the glass, who is going to put them in?
That is probably a very good idea. Unfortunately a man has to know his limitations with the tools avaible and my skill in woodwork there is no way I could cut streight lines on a piece of mdf let alone get the dimentions right to within 1mm

mas99

4,768 posts

186 months

Monday 13th April 2009
quotequote all
Simpo Two said:
allegro said:
Do yourself a favour and take your drawings the the glass place and get their advice. most glass places cut to a tolerence of +/- 2/3mm
That seems pretty poor to me - why can't they do +/- 1mm? Don't they have rulers?
I've never had any trouble getting glass cut exactly at the local glass merchant.

I think that toughened glass has to go through the toughening process after it has been cut. Otherwise it just shatters when you try to cut/drill it.