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-   -   Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/274256-using-self-leveling-compound-bottom-cabinet.html)

Dave[_39_] March 24th 09 04:04 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
I have a rental property that had a plumbing leak (it's fixed). The
base of the cabinet is particle board and has warped so that there's
now about a 2" depression in the middle.

Replacing the cabinet would result in having to replace *all* of the
kitchen cabinets to match, so this isn't going to happen.

I was thinking I'd use a self-leveling compound and then lay vinyl
tiles over it. I could glue a piece of 1/8" plywood over the leveling
compound if there may be a problem with the vinyl tile adhesive
directly on the leveling compound.

Am I on the right track here? Any suggestions for a self-leveling
product (preferably non-cement based) I can get at Home Depot?

Joe March 24th 09 04:35 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
On Mar 24, 11:04*am, Dave wrote:
I have a rental property that had a plumbing leak (it's fixed). *The
base of the cabinet is particle board and has warped so that there's
now about a 2" depression in the middle.

Replacing the cabinet would result in having to replace *all* of the
kitchen cabinets to match, so this isn't going to happen.

I was thinking I'd use a self-leveling compound and then lay vinyl
tiles over it. *I could glue a piece of 1/8" plywood over the leveling
compound if there may be a problem with the vinyl tile adhesive
directly on the leveling compound.

Am I on the right track here? *Any suggestions for a self-leveling
product (preferably non-cement based) I can get at Home Depot?


Cut out the particle board an inch away from each edge, leaving a nice
ledge for a new piece of plywood, fiberglass sheet or the material of
your choice and drop it in with a bit of water resistant glue. No
mess, no waiting, half hour done and gone.

Joe

Dave[_40_] March 24th 09 05:24 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
Joe wrote:

Cut out the particle board an inch away from each edge, leaving a nice
ledge for a new piece of plywood, fiberglass sheet or the material of
your choice and drop it in with a bit of water resistant glue. No
mess, no waiting, half hour done and gone.

Joe


If I go this route, why bother with the cutting?

There is a problem with this method. Due to the size of the cabinet
opening, I cannot fit the replacement piece into the cabinet as a solid
piece. I would have to split it across the short dimension. Doing this
leaves no support along the split. I might be able to put a 2x4
underneath along the split, but I won't know until I cut out what's
there and then it will be too late.

I'd rather try to work with what's there first.

dadiOH[_3_] March 24th 09 06:08 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
Dave wrote:
Joe wrote:

Cut out the particle board an inch away from each edge, leaving a
nice ledge for a new piece of plywood, fiberglass sheet or the
material of your choice and drop it in with a bit of water resistant
glue. No mess, no waiting, half hour done and gone.

Joe


If I go this route, why bother with the cutting?

There is a problem with this method. Due to the size of the cabinet
opening, I cannot fit the replacement piece into the cabinet as a
solid piece. I would have to split it across the short dimension. Doing
this leaves no support along the split. I might be able to put
a 2x4 underneath along the split, but I won't know until I cut out
what's there and then it will be too late.


1. Split the new piece

2. Screw/glue a piece of 1x2 or 1x3 along the split on the bottom side of
one piece so it overhangs the bottom by 3/4" or so.

3. Put in the piece from #3

4. Put in the other split piece. The batten will support it along the
split. Screw to it if you like.


--

dadiOH
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Dave[_40_] March 24th 09 06:33 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
dadiOH wrote:
1. Split the new piece

2. Screw/glue a piece of 1x2 or 1x3 along the split on the bottom side of
one piece so it overhangs the bottom by 3/4" or so.

3. Put in the piece from #3

4. Put in the other split piece. The batten will support it along the
split. Screw to it if you like.


Yeah, I like this idea. I'll just stain the plywood and save myself the
trouble of laying tiles.

Thanks!

Malcolm Hoar March 24th 09 08:21 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
In article , Dave wrote:
2. Screw/glue a piece of 1x2 or 1x3 along the split on the bottom side of
one piece so it overhangs the bottom by 3/4" or so.


Yeah, I like this idea.


I agree, very simple.

I'll just stain the plywood and save myself the trouble of laying tiles.


I'm less sure about the stain though. And I see a problem with
the original vinyl tile approach too -- dirt gets trapped in
the joint lines.

I picked up some scrap sheet vinyl flooring for a few bucks
and used that to line a couple of kitchen cupboards -- one
under the sink and the other under the stove (pan storage).
It worked great.

Oh, I also sealed the corners to prevent dirt becomming
trapped there, using clear silicone caulk.

--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
| Gary Player. |
|
http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~

Dave[_40_] March 25th 09 01:35 PM

Using self leveling compound in bottom of cabinet
 
On 3/24/2009 11:08 dadiOH wrote:

1. Split the new piece

2. Screw/glue a piece of 1x2 or 1x3 along the split on the bottom side of
one piece so it overhangs the bottom by 3/4" or so.

3. Put in the piece from #3

4. Put in the other split piece. The batten will support it along the
split. Screw to it if you like.


Ok, so this is the approach I used. Because I wanted to leave as much
of the original material as possible for support, I cut only a ~6" strip
out of the center of the existing wood to accommodate the batten. I
used 1x4 on the batten for the added support

I like the idea of the vinyl flooring, but I didn't have time to search
around for scrap pieces. I just stained the plywood to match the color
of the existing cabinets and called it a day.

I didn't glue the new piece in place. I wanted to be able to easily
remove the platform in case there's another leak or whatever other
reason I might have for needing to remove it. I cut it to pretty tight
tolerances and screwed both pieces to the batten so it's a snug fit and
won't move around.

Thanks for the suggestions!


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