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[email protected] March 10th 06 03:36 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Hello,

When I bought this condo a year ago it had a brand new kitchen
cabinets. However, some time ago I noticed small cracks between joints.
Also, cabinet doors seem not to be aligned properly (as if the wood was
bended a little). This was not happening a year ago. These cabinets are
top-notch and (supposedly) of high quality. Here are some pictures:

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/3.jpg

Did this happen because of dry/hot air? Is there anything that I can do
to prevent any further damage or fix existing conditions?

These pics were taken a year ago (you won't see much details):

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg

Thanks,
Lukasz


Josh March 10th 06 04:13 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
wrote:
....
These cabinets are
top-notch and (supposedly) of high quality. Here are some pictures:


I hate to rain on your parade, but these look like pretty shoddy work.
Mitered rails and stiles? On a quality scale of 1 to 10, they look
like about a 2. And that's what I would have said if there WEREN'T
gaping cracks.

Judging by the workmanship, the door panels are probably glued into the
frames. As the humidity changes throughout the year the panel can
expand and, unless it floats within the frame, can force the joints
apart. You can check if the panels are floating by simply sliding them
with your hand. If they are done correctly, you should be able to
slide the panels up/down/left/right a little bit inside the frame.

If the panels ARE floating, you can probably fix this. Depending if
you have any talent or experience with woodworking, you could drill a
hole in the side of the door perpendicular to the mitered joint and
using a screw to pull the pieces back together. There are ways to do
this such that you can disguise the screw hole when you're done.

Sorry. I hope you didn't pay a lot for them.


Jerzy March 10th 06 05:32 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Sorry. I hope you didn't pay a lot for them.

Well, I paid a lot for the whole apartment and the custom kitchen was
factored into the cost. I guess, I don't have to replace everything,
just cabinet doors in the worst case, correct? Do you know how much
would it cost to order a custom (good/high quality) doors a piece? I
hope that they could be made to match the existing texture/color of the
shelves.


Jerzy March 10th 06 05:34 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
These pics were taken a year ago (you won't see much details):

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg


I posted incorrect links. Here is the whole thing (photo taken a year
ago):

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k2.jpg


Phisherman March 10th 06 12:20 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Replace the doors. Better to look for stile-and-rail mortise joinery
in new doors. Plus, make sure all sides are finished equally. Kitchen
cabinets take a beating with steam and changes in heat/humidity.

On 9 Mar 2006 19:36:12 -0800, wrote:

Hello,

When I bought this condo a year ago it had a brand new kitchen
cabinets. However, some time ago I noticed small cracks between joints.
Also, cabinet doors seem not to be aligned properly (as if the wood was
bended a little). This was not happening a year ago. These cabinets are
top-notch and (supposedly) of high quality. Here are some pictures:

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/3.jpg

Did this happen because of dry/hot air? Is there anything that I can do
to prevent any further damage or fix existing conditions?

These pics were taken a year ago (you won't see much details):

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg

Thanks,
Lukasz


Swingman March 10th 06 01:08 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
These cabinets are
top-notch


Wanna bet? The doors are certainly not.

Therefore you will also want to suspect the cabinets themselves before you
go spending money replacing doors.

Best bet is to find someone who knows what they are doing to check things
out for you.

Unless you can find an honest/respected local cabinet maker (most have a
tendency to bad mouth everyone's work but theirs), consider paying a
licensed, third party building inspector for an honest appraisal of the
cabinet's structural situation before paying good money for new doors.

Just a year? ... any homeowner warranty under your state's laws?

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 12/13/05





RicodJour March 10th 06 01:22 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

Mike Marlow wrote:
"Jerzy" wrote in message
oups.com...
Sorry. I hope you didn't pay a lot for them.


Well, I paid a lot for the whole apartment and the custom kitchen was
factored into the cost. I guess, I don't have to replace everything,
just cabinet doors in the worst case, correct? Do you know how much
would it cost to order a custom (good/high quality) doors a piece? I
hope that they could be made to match the existing texture/color of the
shelves.


If these cabinets are only a year or two old, why not approach the
manufacturer? Or the company you bought the unit from? If you bought an
upgrade that was supposed to be "high end" (whatever that means - no
particular insult pointed at your cabinets), then there should be a warranty
behind them. Hell, even the basic stuff probably has some sort of warranty
behind it. Joinery coming apart would certainly fall into a defect in
materials and workmanship in my opinion. You never know until you try...


You're right about that - it can't hurt to ask, but it is as I expect,
a local carpenter, can't say cabinetmaker, built those as per the
previous owner's instructions with mitered corners, who is at fault?
The owner probably didn't know any better and there wasn't anything
concealed from the buyer.

The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.

R


Mike Marlow March 10th 06 02:13 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


You're right about that - it can't hurt to ask, but it is as I expect,
a local carpenter, can't say cabinetmaker, built those as per the
previous owner's instructions with mitered corners, who is at fault?
The owner probably didn't know any better and there wasn't anything
concealed from the buyer.


My bet - standard construction quality "upgrade". Came from some production
shop hidden somewhere in... well, who knows.

The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.


I'm also wondering if he bought it new or purchased it from an existing
owner. That would about kill any warranty claims... likely.

--

-Mike-




dadiOH March 10th 06 02:15 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
RicodJour wrote:

You're right about that - it can't hurt to ask, but it is as I expect,
a local carpenter, can't say cabinetmaker, built those as per the
previous owner's instructions with mitered corners, who is at fault?


Same idea but just judging from the unusual design - the reverse bevel
frames - I kinda suspect that they were designed by a designer (or
architect) who was enamoured with the effect of mitered frames and that
some poor, hapless shop built them according to specs.

--
dadiOH
____________________________

dadiOH's dandies v3.06...
....a help file of info about MP3s, recording from
LP/cassette and tips & tricks on this and that.
Get it at http://mysite.verizon.net/xico



Josh March 10th 06 02:22 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
The work looks a nicer when you see the whole kitchen, not just the
close-ups of the corners.

I know you can order custom maple doors from
http://www.hardwoodstore.com. The price is pretty reasonable,
especially for flat panel doors like yours, but you'll have to find
someone who can match the finish for you.

Good luck.

Jerzy wrote:
Sorry. I hope you didn't pay a lot for them.


Well, I paid a lot for the whole apartment and the custom kitchen was
factored into the cost. I guess, I don't have to replace everything,
just cabinet doors in the worst case, correct? Do you know how much
would it cost to order a custom (good/high quality) doors a piece? I
hope that they could be made to match the existing texture/color of the
shelves.



Stephen M March 10th 06 03:39 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
So what's the underlying mechanism for the joint opening up only on the
inside? Is it that the width of the rails and stiles shrinks more than
the length and, therefore, the miter angle changes from a perfect 45
to, say, 46 degrees?


Yes. Wood does not shrink in length only in width (not really none, but the
ratios of movement is something like 100:50:1 for parallel to the growth
rings:across the growth rings:along the grain).





Scorp March 10th 06 08:14 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
On 9 Mar 2006 19:36:12 -0800, wrote:

Hello,

When I bought this condo a year ago it had a brand new kitchen
cabinets. However, some time ago I noticed small cracks between joints.


Did this happen because of dry/hot air? Is there anything that I can do
to prevent any further damage or fix existing conditions?


For some reason the wood has dried, cold dry winter maybe? Wood not
dry when constructed? These may close back up in the summer. I'd say
this is pretty normal for mitre joints.

You could also try to raise the relative humidity in your apartment.
If the joints close, douse them with wax, maybe a hot melted
carnuba/paint thinner mixture. Wax is supposed to be the best barrier
againt moisture changes. (From FWW article)

--------------------
Steve Jensen
Abbotsford B.C.
chopping out the mortise.
BBS'ing since 1982 at 300 bps.
Surfing along at 19200 bps since 95.
WW'ing since 1985
LV Cust #4114

Nothing catchy to say, well maybe.....
WAKE UP - There are no GODs you fools!

John Grossbohlin March 11th 06 12:25 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.


Judging by the names of the files I believe he posted the same photos for
the before shots as he did for the after shots...

John



RicodJour March 11th 06 12:53 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.


Judging by the names of the files I believe he posted the same photos for
the before shots as he did for the after shots...


I was going by what he wrote, not the file names. Read it again and
you'll see what I mean.

R


John Grossbohlin March 11th 06 12:58 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...
John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.


Judging by the names of the files I believe he posted the same photos for
the before shots as he did for the after shots...


I was going by what he wrote, not the file names. Read it again and
you'll see what I mean.


I understood your message was based on what was written but because the year
earlier photos weren't--they were the current ones again--it gave you bad
information to work with. I see that the OP noted the link error in another
message

John



RicodJour March 11th 06 01:07 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...
John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.

Judging by the names of the files I believe he posted the same photos for
the before shots as he did for the after shots...


I was going by what he wrote, not the file names. Read it again and
you'll see what I mean.


I understood your message was based on what was written but because the year
earlier photos weren't--they were the current ones again--it gave you bad
information to work with. I see that the OP noted the link error in another
message


Here's his later post where he corrected the links:
These pics were taken a year ago (you won't see much details):


http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/2.jpg


I posted incorrect links. Here is the whole thing (photo taken a year
ago):

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k1.jpg
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k2.jpg


If you read his original post he says he _bought_ the place a year ago.
Well, if the corrected links are from a year ago, and he bought the
place a year ago, and the gaps in the miters are visible back them,
well, something is odd here, and only the OP can straighten it out.

R


John Grossbohlin March 11th 06 01:23 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

"RicodJour" wrote in message
ups.com...


If you read his original post he says he _bought_ the place a year ago.
Well, if the corrected links are from a year ago, and he bought the
place a year ago, and the gaps in the miters are visible back them,
well, something is odd here, and only the OP can straighten it out.


We're saying basically the same thing...

I pulled the corrected link photos into Photoshop and the open miters don't
appear to be there but the left and middle upper cabinet doors aren't
aligned across the bottom. On that count there doesn't appear to be a change
over time.

John



RicodJour March 11th 06 01:35 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...
John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
oups.com...


The thing that I just noticed is that the OP mentioned in an earlier
post that he bought the unit a year ago and also included some pictures
from a year ago. Those pictures show the gaps in the miters. Hmmm.
These things don't happen over night, so I wonder exactly how old those
cabinets are and when the gaps became objectionable.

Judging by the names of the files I believe he posted the same photos for
the before shots as he did for the after shots...


I was going by what he wrote, not the file names. Read it again and
you'll see what I mean.


I understood your message was based on what was written but because the year
earlier photos weren't--they were the current ones again--it gave you bad
information to work with. I see that the OP noted the link error in another
message


I'm not going by the earlier photos, John. I'm going by the corrected
ones and what he wrote. Now assuming the OP can differentiate the
years, something doesn't add up. You can't straighten it out, as you
have no more information than I do. Only the OP can clarify the
situation.

BTW, somebody else mentioned the odd location of the pulls. It really
is weird, right on the edge of that bevel.

R


RicodJour March 11th 06 01:47 AM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 

John Grossbohlin wrote:
"RicodJour" wrote in message
ups.com...


If you read his original post he says he _bought_ the place a year ago.
Well, if the corrected links are from a year ago, and he bought the
place a year ago, and the gaps in the miters are visible back them,
well, something is odd here, and only the OP can straighten it out.


We're saying basically the same thing...

I pulled the corrected link photos into Photoshop and the open miters don't
appear to be there but the left and middle upper cabinet doors aren't
aligned across the bottom. On that count there doesn't appear to be a change
over time.


I didn't import it, I just clicked on the picture and it bumped up to
its native resolution. At that size you can see stuff.
Check out the miter on the cabinet base door on the lower left.
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k1.jpg
I definitely see a gap in the miter on that one.
And on this one:
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k2.jpg
there's a gap on the base cabinet inn the lower left, second one in.

I guess that's one of the benefits of him posting those big ass
pictures. ;)

R


RicodJour March 11th 06 06:27 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Jerzy wrote:
OK, thanks everyone for responding. I really appreciate your comments
and suggestions.I will try to approach the seller for a warranty since
he had renovated the kitchen before I bought the appartment.

Apart from joints coming apart, the doors don't shut properly (as if
the wood was bended somehow) - there is a gap in the lower part, while
the upper part seems to be aligned correctly. Here is a picture which
shows that:

http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k3.jpg

(not the best picture but it should give you an idea)


Where did you get the idea that an owner warranties a house he's sold?
If it was a latent and concealed condition, not picked up during the
inspection (you did have it inspected, didn't you?), and the owner
knowingly concealed that information, then you'd have a case. But this
was a readily visible problem, so you don't.

If the refrigerator had died, the sink started rusting through, or
something similar, would you expect the previous owner to pay to fix
it? There are new home warranties, but used homes don't have one
unless you pay for it. I'm assuming you didn't or you wouldn't be
looking to the previous owner.

As others here have pointed out, your cabinets were doomed from the
start due to their construction. A good home inspector would have
noticed those gaps and pointed out the problem. The gaps are clearly
visible in the pictures from a year ago, so it would have been pretty
hard for the inspector to miss the gaps seeing them in person. So
either your home inspector wasn't very good, or you didn't get an
inspection.

In any event, you have just bought yourself a learning experience. You
can try shaking a tree to see if anything will fall, but you really
don't have a case. My advice would be to start investigating the cost
to replace the cabinet doors. You'll need to have that
information/estimate even if someone does, miraculously, decide that
they owe you something.

Here's a link to give you some idea of a cabinet door cost. make sure
that you factor in delivery, and finishing.
http://www.woodtradition.com/catalog...76/1044243.htm
Other manufacturers sell prefinished doors which is probably a better
way to go. They'll send you finish samples upon request.

Another thing I just noticed in this pictu
http://lukaszanddaria.homedns.org/k2.jpg
See those big filler strips where the cabinets turn the 45 degree
corner? I don't think the cabinets were custom made, so much as site
built on standard boxes. Those are awfully large filler strips and
entirely avoidable with custom cabinets. If the space behind those
filler strips is inaccessible, the cabinets were definitely not custom
made.

R


Jerzy March 11th 06 07:09 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Where did you get the idea that an owner warranties a house he's sold?

Not the owner, but the manufacturer if there is still a warranty. Prior
to selling me the apartment he renovated the whole kitchen, and yes the
place was inspected. As I said, at that time joints weren't falling
apart and the wood was not bended (all doors shut properly). As someone
already pointed out it is the manufacturer's fault.

See those big filler strips where the cabinets turn the 45 degree corner?


No, I don't know what you mean.


RicodJour March 11th 06 08:32 PM

Cracks in wooden kitchen cabinets
 
Jerzy wrote:
Where did you get the idea that an owner warranties a house he's sold?


Not the owner, but the manufacturer if there is still a warranty. Prior
to selling me the apartment he renovated the whole kitchen, and yes the
place was inspected. As I said, at that time joints weren't falling
apart and the wood was not bended (all doors shut properly). As someone
already pointed out it is the manufacturer's fault.


Manufacturer is a euphemism. They were built by a carpenter. If
you're saying that it's the builders fault, maybe yes, maybe no.
What's your opinion on the situation if the owner directed the
carpenter to build the cabinets fast and cheap? Is the carpenter still
responsible? It's not as cut and dried as you seem to think. I'm also
not sure why you would assume that the warranty is transferable, but
since I don't know where you are and what your state's laws are in that
respect I can't comment.

It's not a small job, nor expense, to replace all of the doors and
regardless of what your state's laws indicate, I doubt the original
carpenter will rollover willingly. I think you have an uphill battle
on your hands if you decide to sue, but it's your time and money.

See those big filler strips where the cabinets turn the 45 degree corner?


No, I don't know what you mean.


Spaces between cabinet doors that are just blanked off - no access.
It's a sign of fudging to make standard sized cabinets fit. As
standard manufactured cabinets come in 3" increments, there's no reason
to have a filler piece larger than 1 1/2". You have filler strips that
are substantially larger than that.

As the buyer it's up to you to verify the quality and condition of what
you are buying. You noticed the gaps when you bought the place. Have
you ever seen cabinets anywhere else with gaps in the corners before?
They're very rare as most all kitchen cabinets are built correctly,
with tried and true methods, except for DIY cabinets. As far as the
inspection, if you didn't realize what those gaps indicated, your
inspector should have. A large manufacturer will have a warranty
policy in place and indicate whether it is transferrable or not. A
small time outfit, like the guy who built your cabinets, won't have any
such policy, will have no warranty reserve fund, and as far as he's
concerned you'll be a Johhny-come-lately trying to steal his profits.

I'm not trying to bust your chops, I'm just pointing out a few things.
You asked for professional opinions, and that's what you're getting.
I'm not a cheering section - I just call them as I see them.

R



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