s219
Super Member
- Joined
- Dec 7, 2011
- Messages
- 8,548
- Location
- Virginia USA
- Tractor
- Kubota L3200, Deere X380, Kubota RTV-X
I have always been impressed with IKEA cabinets -- very good quality for the money. Most builders poo-poo the thought though.
We went with Decora cabinets in our Kitchen, but used Marsh for the bathrooms and laundry room to save money. There is a noticeable reduction in the grade of the materials comparing Marsh to Decora, but the quality, construction, and finish on the Marsh units are fine -- mainly just lighter weight door and drawer materials (we upgraded hardware to the same as Decora). Our cabinet guys did remarkable install work -- they were from the actual cabinet shop, where we also worked with a sales guy to design and plan everything out over about 4 months and 8-10 meetings. As a result, there were no surprises and they thought of a bunch of details and design factors that I would have missed completely. I would not be surprised if their install tolerance was 1/32" -- it seems that good to me. They enlarged a drawer opening for our drawer microwave, and the cutout measurements were spot on, so now the microwave sits perfectly centered.
Contrast that with our old house, where we had decent quality IXL cabinets, but installed by the builder. They did such a lousy job with the install, there's not enough space on the page for me to explain. About 8 years after we moved in, I did a kitchen remodel and fixed everything, also adding crown and base molding, real wood side veneers, and we ran the cork floor up to the toe kick area to replace the cheap toe kicks they used. When I pulled some of the old cabinets off to do the work, I saw evidence that these clowns did not use a stud sensor, instead poking zillions of holes in the wall (there was literally a woodpecker-like row of holes). And they apparently had dull saw blades and lousy saw skills. On top of that, it looks like they mounted at least one cabinet a three different heights before figuring out the right spot.
I think you have decent cabinets, but lousy install and rough handling of the cabinets that resulted in dings. In addition, it looks like they are not using a sharp saw blade or even thinking through their cuts to minimize the effect of blowing out the grain. All of that adds up.
I guess you do need to move the outlets down, but to me the top cabinets look 3-4" too low, which may be the real problem. I absolutely hate kitchens where the cabinets are in your face and you can't see down to the countertop from a reasonable distance (I'm 6'1", so it may be a height issue). I made sure that wasn't an issue in our new house (there is about 21" of space from counter to cabinets). The only place where code trumped me was the height of the range hood, but at 69" at least it's above my eye height.
We went with Decora cabinets in our Kitchen, but used Marsh for the bathrooms and laundry room to save money. There is a noticeable reduction in the grade of the materials comparing Marsh to Decora, but the quality, construction, and finish on the Marsh units are fine -- mainly just lighter weight door and drawer materials (we upgraded hardware to the same as Decora). Our cabinet guys did remarkable install work -- they were from the actual cabinet shop, where we also worked with a sales guy to design and plan everything out over about 4 months and 8-10 meetings. As a result, there were no surprises and they thought of a bunch of details and design factors that I would have missed completely. I would not be surprised if their install tolerance was 1/32" -- it seems that good to me. They enlarged a drawer opening for our drawer microwave, and the cutout measurements were spot on, so now the microwave sits perfectly centered.
Contrast that with our old house, where we had decent quality IXL cabinets, but installed by the builder. They did such a lousy job with the install, there's not enough space on the page for me to explain. About 8 years after we moved in, I did a kitchen remodel and fixed everything, also adding crown and base molding, real wood side veneers, and we ran the cork floor up to the toe kick area to replace the cheap toe kicks they used. When I pulled some of the old cabinets off to do the work, I saw evidence that these clowns did not use a stud sensor, instead poking zillions of holes in the wall (there was literally a woodpecker-like row of holes). And they apparently had dull saw blades and lousy saw skills. On top of that, it looks like they mounted at least one cabinet a three different heights before figuring out the right spot.
I think you have decent cabinets, but lousy install and rough handling of the cabinets that resulted in dings. In addition, it looks like they are not using a sharp saw blade or even thinking through their cuts to minimize the effect of blowing out the grain. All of that adds up.
I guess you do need to move the outlets down, but to me the top cabinets look 3-4" too low, which may be the real problem. I absolutely hate kitchens where the cabinets are in your face and you can't see down to the countertop from a reasonable distance (I'm 6'1", so it may be a height issue). I made sure that wasn't an issue in our new house (there is about 21" of space from counter to cabinets). The only place where code trumped me was the height of the range hood, but at 69" at least it's above my eye height.