OP
nicholam77
Well-known member
This weekend I attached the drawer face, drilled holes for the sink and faucet, and attached to the wall. Getting there!
View media item 86765
View media item 86766
Overall I'm really happy with the look and size, and I think the natural maple looks really beautiful against the contemporary fixtures.
I am a bit disappointed in the Blum drawer slides and the front drawer face (it's slightly bowed). It makes the "Tip-On" push to open feature not very useable. The warping in the drawer face combined with the play in the drawer slides means you can't push near the top to open. And pushing towards the bottom by the actual drawer is too low for comfort now that it's mounted at it's actual height.
Here's a short video showing the drawer:
View media item 86767
Looking back, I probably didn't need to complicate it this much. I could have just done a door with euro hinges instead of a drawer and still had the same look. Or a door with a drawer inside, just not with the face of the cabinet attached as a false front. Or no drawer inside and just stored some towels on the bottom shelf. I think I wanted to pack as much functionality as I could into a small design, and was interested in the Tip-On feature from Blum. Seeing as it didn't work as well as I expected it kinda defeats the purpose of overcomplicating it, but that's okay.
View media item 86765
View media item 86766
Overall I'm really happy with the look and size, and I think the natural maple looks really beautiful against the contemporary fixtures.
I am a bit disappointed in the Blum drawer slides and the front drawer face (it's slightly bowed). It makes the "Tip-On" push to open feature not very useable. The warping in the drawer face combined with the play in the drawer slides means you can't push near the top to open. And pushing towards the bottom by the actual drawer is too low for comfort now that it's mounted at it's actual height.
Here's a short video showing the drawer:
View media item 86767
Looking back, I probably didn't need to complicate it this much. I could have just done a door with euro hinges instead of a drawer and still had the same look. Or a door with a drawer inside, just not with the face of the cabinet attached as a false front. Or no drawer inside and just stored some towels on the bottom shelf. I think I wanted to pack as much functionality as I could into a small design, and was interested in the Tip-On feature from Blum. Seeing as it didn't work as well as I expected it kinda defeats the purpose of overcomplicating it, but that's okay.





Well, after I opened the wall up I did find low voltage wiring, but it was dead-ended and couldn't find a chime or transformer anywhere. So I piggybacked a new transformer off the light switch box and ran new wiring for a chime. I put the transformer in the wall because I wasn't able to pull the low voltage wire anywhere else like the attic. To make it serviceable I installed it behind a drywall access panel. Of course, all this meant making holes in the drywall. I must be some sort of masochist. 
