This is excellent. A hinge had come apart (perhaps from leaning on the door while looking for a drip under the sink). There was a tiny spring and a small metal button. The video clearly showed how these fit together, so I was able to re-assemble the hinge. Easier than a Rubik's Cube! :-)
I am designing cabinets for my workshop and want to use these type of hinges. Do any of the manufacturers provide CAD (Solidworks) models for that I can use in my drawings?
I have nothing but problems with my cabinets' hinges. The plastic bits eventually crack. They're constantly coming loose then my doors are no longer level. I've replaced many of them and still have issues with the new ones eventually. My son checked every one in July and replaced several. I already had issues with two of them in November. I have no one here, like kids, handling them roughly. Not sure what to do at this point.
This is excellent. A hinge had come apart (perhaps from leaning on the door while looking for a drip under the sink). There was a tiny spring and a small metal button. The video clearly showed how these fit together, so I was able to re-assemble the hinge. Easier than a Rubik's Cube! :-)
I am designing cabinets for my workshop and want to use these type of hinges. Do any of the manufacturers provide CAD (Solidworks) models for that I can use in my drawings?
I believe Blum does, here - www.blum.com/su/en/services/industrial-production/cad-cam-dataservice/
I have nothing but problems with my cabinets' hinges. The plastic bits eventually crack. They're constantly coming loose then my doors are no longer level. I've replaced many of them and still have issues with the new ones eventually. My son checked every one in July and replaced several. I already had issues with two of them in November. I have no one here, like kids, handling them roughly. Not sure what to do at this point.
That doesn't sound fun...What plastic part is breaking? Usually the hinges should be metal. What brand are you using?