Awesome job! I never would have thought of building this cabinet like you did. I built my own kitchen cabinets and had to make a corner cabinet that was huge. I actually had to make two separate boxes and fit them together. They are out of 3/4 in birch and my cabinet fronts are poplar. As always, I have enjoyed this video just as much as others.
....and mm stands for MeasureMent... REAL measurement! You guys using "freedom units" are out numbered by the rest of the world, remember that.👍👍👍 From a fan in Denmark, Northern Europe 🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰
I’m pretty sure that 15/16 all go by the imperial system on here, though a mm of us may “may” be trying to figure out what the hell all that means; cm, mm, meter??? I just know I want to see the speedometer in American muscle MPH cruising down the road, than I would kilometers. ( kilometers is that right?).
@@johncamp7679 In metric, you have a "base unit", for length it is meter. For smaller or bigger units you have a prefix and the prefix tells you the factor for conversion. Centi means 1/100, milli means 1/1000, kilo means 1000. 1 m equals 1000 mm or 100 cm or 0,001 km. Converting a unit is as easy as shifting the komma (or dot in the US). Want to know how many cm are 35,82 m? Easy, it is 3582 cm. Btw, you might want to reconsider your preference for mph. When you're going merely 50 mph, my car says I'm going a bit over 80 kmh :)
@@1001digital mm stands for mouse marks. cm stands for chicken marks. m stands for mooses. km stands for killer mooses. I get really confused with measuring in elephants, buses and football fields, they're just not intuitive.
Very cool solution. Our lazy Susan has the door faces mounted to it. You push in on either door face and they just spin around inside the cabinet with the lazy Susan. Downside is you can smash your fingers if not paying attention.
I got your miter station plans to use as a guide to go in my shop. I’ve never built cabinets before. Well….. i didn’t realize I needed about 34” to use my saw on a 24” top. I figured it out, and I’m working on the drawers now. It looks so good, I didn’t realize how enjoyable it was all going to be.
As a cabinetmaker it’s always a good thing to cut a 45degree angle on the back corner to accommodate the excess mud buildup used in the corner. Just sayin😉
The one in our kitchen has two separate doors. You close one, which has no handle, and then the other, which has a handle, closes across the front of it. You have to close them in the right order because the handle prevents you doing otherwise. It is a slight inconvenience but I think it is MUCH stronger than the folding door method. Thirty years with no problem. The two rotating trays turn together, so you don't need to bend down to rotate the lower one.
To install your lazy Susan Hinges, those Woodpeckers corner clamps could have been handy to hold yours doors together while you mark and measure. Also, in place of those special lazy susan hinges, a simple piano hinge is what is used the most and does a great job.
Both houses I've lived in have had lazy Susan's, the first just used 2 full length piano hinges and the second has the doors attached and spins with them
Those are from a long time ago. With that type of door, the weight of the product on the shelves had to be distributed perfectly, or the doors wouldn't line up with the face of the cabinet, when it was supposed to be closed.
@@darrinlindsey Not that long ago. My house was built in 98 and the doors are attached to the trays. The gaps around the doors are pretty wide, like 3/8" but they spin both trays at the same time so you don't have to bend down to spin the bottom or spin both to get them back to center and I don't have to worry about the hinges getting loose as people use the door to lean on when reaching down.
Our home was upgraded in 2000's and those LS still existed then. Because of those gaps my mim went against it. Pest liked to crawl into them. Got the info from her friends. So she decided against them
I used to see them with piano hinges connecting the two door halves, and any ol' lift off leaf hinge to mount the whole thing on the cabinet. Quite simple.
In the northeast this cabinet is called a Whirl-a-gig. a lazy susan is spinning item that you put on the middle of your table so you can get to things like salt, pepper, etc.
My parents have two corner lazy susans in their circa 1990 kitchen. Theirs have two inset doors mounted to the lazy S itself that rotate with it. You just push n a door and the whole thing starts spinning. It looks especially goofy since none of the other doors are inset... but it works. No hinges.
I would have liked to see the clip of you searching the floor and unraveling the paper ball instructions to see how the lazy Susan mechanism works. Cheers John from County Durham England.
Hi Jason! I am a huge fan!!! Curious why you chose to purchase metal wire lazy Susan shelves instead of building one from wood? Beautiful work! Enjoy learning from you!
I bought and installed the same lazy Susan hardware a few months ago. I have found that after a few months of use, it no longer spins as well as it once did (I think the plastic parts of the joints have gotten stuck so now the metal part rotates around the stuck plastic which is not ideal. It still works but now the Susan feels extra lazy because I have to do all the work to turn it.
Tsk Tsk... site failure, when I went to book Craig, it said the appointments page was not found. Shame they don't have a tool for checking for dead links. ;)
We have 2 lazy Susan’s , upper and a lower cabinet in our kitchen the doors are attached to the lazy Susan’s so you just push one side or other to access them
I admire the cabinet and built, but... We have the doors attached to the Lazy Susan, so they fold and 'turn' into the cabinet. In my personal opinion that's nicer and more practical than a separate door which sticks out. AND... You don't need special hinges 😉 But nevertheless, nicely made 👍🏻
Hinge on the face frame is under more than 2x the normal stress. Open/close + weight of "2 doors. Need heavy duty anchors too. Careful to not split the face frame when using.
You could of gone extra 'fancy-schmancy' (technical term) with the doors and attach them directly TO the swinging trays. And give up all the complicated hinges. These are inset doors anyway, right? To open the Lazy Susan you would just push on the door and swing the doors along with the trays, right or left. Yes, you would also have to play with the face frame a little to allow it to happen, but you can figure it out.
Any chance you can link the other hinges you used. Been trying to find a160-175 degree hinge with no overlay and every time I order some it ends up being a overlay.
Although this is a novel approach, Hafele and Blum have far better products for dead corner cabinets that allow you to have a regular door on one side of the cabinet and then pull out caddy drawers that allow you to store stuff deep into the cabinet.
Don't do lazy suzan inside the corner. It waste space. 24" wide & 24" deep= 288 sq" lazy s 24"dia."= 75sq" shelf space, - 90 degree front corner notch( a common (design)= 57sq" on suzan. For storage available. Have seen a pull out square shelf and slide to side corner unit that looks far better use and easy access into deep of corner.= 288sq" useable shelf. I'm was a kitchen cabinet design/builder years back.
Those cabinets are typically made so the two backsides are 6" away from the wall. This eliminates the space, in the back of the cabinet, for when things fall off the shelves.
hey love your channel. just moved to your neck of the woods. don't worry not a stalker ;) I need to build some cabinets and was hoping you could recommend a local wood supplier?
One speculation is that the name derives from servants in the 1700's who were referred to as “Susans.” Another popular theory is that Thomas Jefferson invented them for his daughter, Susan, who often complained that she was always the last to be served at the dinner table.
Instead of using backstops I personally would have used Neodium magnets on the edge..It would've snapped shut and not gone further..And looked nice too
I have two lazy susan cabinets in my kitchen and the doors are attached to the shelves. No hinges ... just push to open and the doors spin with the shelves.
25,4 Millimeters (MM) = 1 inch 2.54 Centimeters (CM) = 1 inch LUCKILY FOR ME I DO NOT HAVE A PROBLEM MEASURING OR CONVERTING TO BOTH. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂 Caribbean Dutch Lady in Da House!!! 🇨🇼
Another potential problem comes from items accidentally falling off the shelves behind the doors in the open dead space. One of the reasons why they invented two step shelves that enable the use of all the space instead of those circly type shelves. Here are your alternatives: ua-cam.com/video/VaJT_Dm-xyc/v-deo.htmlsi=b3JbCX0EGHTl9pKl ua-cam.com/video/2ldpc42_ATQ/v-deo.htmlsi=P9zxoq2oY1Q1RMj4
So I know it’s the best yield but all your grain is horizontal. Trees 🌲 grow up so the grain is supposed to also be vertical on cabinet parts. Just saying.
Hi I am very happy you keep coming back because I really love your wood 🪵 working 🪵 you really do a Beautiful 😍 🤩 and you really work very hard I will always praying 🙏 for you and your wife and your 🙏 friends ok please 🙏 be careful out there ok 🙏 and please 🙏 be safe 🙏 ok 🙏 can you do more new show for all of us please we will be waiting for you ok you have a wonderful day and have a good night and day do you know I wach you as soon you come on ok love Lorilee xoxoxoxox
The term "Lazy Susan" may come from servants in the 1700s who were called "Susans". "Susan" may have come to be a synonym for "servant", and "lazy Susan" may have referred to a servant who never had to leave. "Laziness" was a common complaint against servants at the time, so "lazy Susan" may have been a usual term since the 18th century.
I'm confused. Why would you have the weird hinged cabinet AND the lazy Susan? You only need one or the other. The whole point of the lazy Susan is so you don't have to do the weird hinged cabinet thing. The lazy Susan is supposed to swing out of the cabinet door on ONE SIDE so you can reach everything. The other side should just be a stationary cabinet wall. With the hinged door L shaped shelves would actually be a better use of space.
This is an honest question. I would like to know if you ever make mistakes on doors or hinges or cabinet carcasses that you don't put in the video. You just rebuild or repair without wasting any time? I mean I thought about it because I probably would. Sorry, I just wonder about things randomly.
I thought a Lazy Suzan was a tray that goes on a table not a carousel for a corner cabinet. Next you are going to tell me butcher block is just a load of parallel sticks laying down and not a surface made of end grain pointing up.
Still not sure why it's called a lazy Suzan because it's a lot of work to make these boxes? Well, in computer science, there is a saying : a good programmer is lazy, but he works hard to achieve that goal.
I have 2 lazy Susan's in my kitchen and they are both so lazy they just sit there as doing nothing but holding everything that just stays there never ti see the light of day ever again
Why is it called "Lazy Susan" this is what google said, do not quote me on this. One speculation is that the name derives from servants in the 1700s who were referred to as “Susan's.” Another popular theory is that Thomas Jefferson invented them for his daughter, Susan, who often complained that she was always the last to be served at the dinner table.
Get a better attitude towards metric. There is a reason the rest of the world uses it. Measuring is with it. Most of your plywood you use is metric plywood and only given as a imperial approximation of 3/4
Awesome job! I never would have thought of building this cabinet like you did.
I built my own kitchen cabinets and had to make a corner cabinet that was huge. I actually had to make two separate boxes and fit them together. They are out of 3/4 in birch and my cabinet fronts are poplar. As always, I have enjoyed this video just as much as others.
....and mm stands for MeasureMent... REAL measurement! You guys using "freedom units" are out numbered by the rest of the world, remember that.👍👍👍
From a fan in Denmark, Northern Europe 🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰🇩🇰
👍🤣😂
What he did with the instructions, I would probably do with an imperial unit instruction and then google the instruction in the metric.
I’m pretty sure that 15/16 all go by the imperial system on here, though a mm of us may “may” be trying to figure out what the hell all that means; cm, mm, meter??? I just know I want to see the speedometer in American muscle MPH cruising down the road, than I would kilometers. ( kilometers is that right?).
@@johncamp7679 In metric, you have a "base unit", for length it is meter. For smaller or bigger units you have a prefix and the prefix tells you the factor for conversion. Centi means 1/100, milli means 1/1000, kilo means 1000. 1 m equals 1000 mm or 100 cm or 0,001 km. Converting a unit is as easy as shifting the komma (or dot in the US). Want to know how many cm are 35,82 m? Easy, it is 3582 cm.
Btw, you might want to reconsider your preference for mph. When you're going merely 50 mph, my car says I'm going a bit over 80 kmh :)
@@1001digital mm stands for mouse marks.
cm stands for chicken marks.
m stands for mooses.
km stands for killer mooses.
I get really confused with measuring in elephants, buses and football fields, they're just not intuitive.
Very cool solution. Our lazy Susan has the door faces mounted to it. You push in on either door face and they just spin around inside the cabinet with the lazy Susan. Downside is you can smash your fingers if not paying attention.
I got your miter station plans to use as a guide to go in my shop. I’ve never built cabinets before. Well….. i didn’t realize I needed about 34” to use my saw on a 24” top. I figured it out, and I’m working on the drawers now. It looks so good, I didn’t realize how enjoyable it was all going to be.
That interlocking square shelf on the wall at the beginning of this video looks like an advanced form of floating stairs!
Great vid, Jason~! I love your "let's figure this out" projects. You nailed it~! Looking forward to the next one.
As a cabinetmaker it’s always a good thing to cut a 45degree angle on the back corner to accommodate the excess mud buildup used in the corner. Just sayin😉
The one in our kitchen has two separate doors. You close one, which has no handle, and then the other, which has a handle, closes across the front of it. You have to close them in the right order because the handle prevents you doing otherwise. It is a slight inconvenience but I think it is MUCH stronger than the folding door method. Thirty years with no problem. The two rotating trays turn together, so you don't need to bend down to rotate the lower one.
To install your lazy Susan Hinges, those Woodpeckers corner clamps could have been handy to hold yours doors together while you mark and measure. Also, in place of those special lazy susan hinges, a simple piano hinge is what is used the most and does a great job.
the mandela effect is strong in this video
Both houses I've lived in have had lazy Susan's, the first just used 2 full length piano hinges and the second has the doors attached and spins with them
I've never seen actual doors on a lazy Susan. The "doors" are usually attached to trays , and spin with the trays.
Those are from a long time ago. With that type of door, the weight of the product on the shelves had to be distributed perfectly, or the doors wouldn't line up with the face of the cabinet, when it was supposed to be closed.
@@darrinlindsey Not that long ago. My house was built in 98 and the doors are attached to the trays. The gaps around the doors are pretty wide, like 3/8" but they spin both trays at the same time so you don't have to bend down to spin the bottom or spin both to get them back to center and I don't have to worry about the hinges getting loose as people use the door to lean on when reaching down.
Our home was upgraded in 2000's and those LS still existed then. Because of those gaps my mim went against it.
Pest liked to crawl into them. Got the info from her friends. So she decided against them
Si!
I used to see them with piano hinges connecting the two door halves, and any ol' lift off leaf hinge to mount the whole thing on the cabinet. Quite simple.
Susan is Karens sister. Susan became Lazy as Karen Complained about everything Susan did so she learned to sit in the corner and do nothing .
Or Susan was working her way through school
... snort ... 😂🤪😜🤪😁🤩
😂😂😂😂 brilliant explanation
In the northeast this cabinet is called a Whirl-a-gig. a lazy susan is spinning item that you put on the middle of your table so you can get to things like salt, pepper, etc.
Looks good. Thanks for sharing.
Have a Corner Cabinet to do as well... this helped... thank you!!!
My parents have two corner lazy susans in their circa 1990 kitchen. Theirs have two inset doors mounted to the lazy S itself that rotate with it. You just push n a door and the whole thing starts spinning. It looks especially goofy since none of the other doors are inset... but it works. No hinges.
I would have liked to see the clip of you searching the floor and unraveling the paper ball instructions to see how the lazy Susan mechanism works. Cheers John from County Durham England.
Hi Jason! I am a huge fan!!! Curious why you chose to purchase metal wire lazy Susan shelves instead of building one from wood? Beautiful work! Enjoy learning from you!
Great video thanks for sharing
I've always known those types of units as carousels
I bought and installed the same lazy Susan hardware a few months ago. I have found that after a few months of use, it no longer spins as well as it once did (I think the plastic parts of the joints have gotten stuck so now the metal part rotates around the stuck plastic which is not ideal. It still works but now the Susan feels extra lazy because I have to do all the work to turn it.
Nice! But I was really hoping you would make some nice wood spinny shelves to replace the dumb cages
Tsk Tsk... site failure, when I went to book Craig, it said the appointments page was not found. Shame they don't have a tool for checking for dead links. ;)
After living abroad for many years, hearing Americans use inches makes me feel the way I used to feel when British people use stones.
Haha Jason. You're a funny man, lazy Susan 😂. And mm is a delightful candy 😉
Nice work as always
We have 2 lazy Susan’s , upper and a lower cabinet in our kitchen the doors are attached to the lazy Susan’s so you just push one side or other to access them
I admire the cabinet and built, but... We have the doors attached to the Lazy Susan, so they fold and 'turn' into the cabinet. In my personal opinion that's nicer and more practical than a separate door which sticks out. AND... You don't need special hinges 😉
But nevertheless, nicely made 👍🏻
Hinge on the face frame is under more than 2x the normal stress. Open/close + weight of "2 doors. Need heavy duty anchors too. Careful to not split the face frame when using.
Loved it!
How about barrel-drum doors? Why not turning the lazy-suzan yourself out of wood and bend wood around to make the edges of the "baskets"?
If anyone is dealing with corner cabinets, try blind corner shelves instead
Jason, Why wouldn't the inside corner of the Lazy Susan doors be a rigid connection, hinged opposite the sink and swing out as an "L" shape?
Where do you get all your Baltic Birch plywood. I'm in Wilmington, NC and cannot find any, nevermind anything with a finished side.
You could also use a piano hinge for then center. Possibly easier to install and cheaper.
Honestly even if it came out in the first 2 minutes I was surprised it took that long to hear “who the heck is Susan?” 😂 Love the channel dude!
You could of gone extra 'fancy-schmancy' (technical term) with the doors and attach them directly TO the swinging trays. And give up all the complicated hinges. These are inset doors anyway, right? To open the Lazy Susan you would just push on the door and swing the doors along with the trays, right or left. Yes, you would also have to play with the face frame a little to allow it to happen, but you can figure it out.
I'm ready to receive the miracle
Where are you getting your prefinished plywood?
Jason, have you considered going metric?
Haven't I've seen this one already?
I thought the same thing.
Any chance you can link the other hinges you used. Been trying to find a160-175 degree hinge with no overlay and every time I order some it ends up being a overlay.
Although this is a novel approach, Hafele and Blum have far better products for dead corner cabinets that allow you to have a regular door on one side of the cabinet and then pull out caddy drawers that allow you to store stuff deep into the cabinet.
Compass baby- buy 10 and put one in every drawer. That way you won’t be playing the “match the paint can lid” to everything that needs a circle drawn.
Euro hinges are the future
Like euro-measurements.. ;)
Like in the early 1900's invented future? 😛
@@klaernieyes
Don't do lazy suzan inside the corner. It waste space. 24" wide & 24" deep= 288 sq" lazy s 24"dia."= 75sq" shelf space, - 90 degree front corner notch( a common (design)= 57sq" on suzan. For storage available. Have seen a pull out square shelf and slide to side corner unit that looks far better use and easy access into deep of corner.= 288sq" useable shelf. I'm was a kitchen cabinet design/builder years back.
"mm" is the measurement with chocolate candy also know as M&M (the ones without the peanut).
Those cabinets are typically made so the two backsides are 6" away from the wall. This eliminates the space, in the back of the cabinet, for when things fall off the shelves.
I find that space useful for hiding spirits from my wife.
What program do you use to make your build?
hey love your channel. just moved to your neck of the woods. don't worry not a stalker ;) I need to build some cabinets and was hoping you could recommend a local wood supplier?
Ive built two of these so far, and lived in a house with another. You will want a lazy susan 'apparatus' that has a solid bottom and not a metal rack.
You need a corner cabinet door, maybe a stand alone ??
One speculation is that the name derives from servants in the 1700's who were referred to as “Susans.” Another popular theory is that Thomas Jefferson invented them for his daughter, Susan, who often complained that she was always the last to be served at the dinner table.
You will notice that the carcass is 36 by 36 but the Susan is only 24 inches.
You can buy a true 36-inch Susan, but it is going to cost a lot.
Instead of using backstops I personally would have used Neodium magnets on the edge..It would've snapped shut and not gone further..And looked nice too
First view! Thanks for doing what you do!
"So with my trusty track saw, with no dust collection hooked up because I like to trigger all the UA-cam armchair woodworkers out there..."
I am confused, I thought you already did the laundry room cabinets?
👍👍👍👍👍👍
I have two lazy susan cabinets in my kitchen and the doors are attached to the shelves. No hinges ... just push to open and the doors spin with the shelves.
Hah! I made the same mistake with the door hinges. Need at least 140 throw instead of normal 110.
25,4 Millimeters (MM) = 1 inch
2.54 Centimeters (CM) = 1 inch
LUCKILY FOR ME I DO NOT HAVE A PROBLEM MEASURING OR CONVERTING TO BOTH. 😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Caribbean Dutch Lady in Da House!!! 🇨🇼
I don't know if these things create more useful spae or just make it easier to get to the back of the shelf. 🤷♂️
I've never done one of these, but i think you did just about every wrong thing i would have, minus a few others😅
Another potential problem comes from items accidentally falling off the shelves behind the doors in the open dead space. One of the reasons why they invented two step shelves that enable the use of all the space instead of those circly type shelves. Here are your alternatives: ua-cam.com/video/VaJT_Dm-xyc/v-deo.htmlsi=b3JbCX0EGHTl9pKl
ua-cam.com/video/2ldpc42_ATQ/v-deo.htmlsi=P9zxoq2oY1Q1RMj4
So I know it’s the best yield but all your grain is horizontal. Trees 🌲 grow up so the grain is supposed to also be vertical on cabinet parts. Just saying.
100th like.🏆
Why aren’t the doors just attached to the lazy Susan and spin with it? Seems unnecessarily to have doors that open outwards.
Your already spinning some ideas
Hi I am very happy you keep coming back because I really love your wood 🪵 working 🪵 you really do a Beautiful 😍 🤩 and you really work very hard I will always praying 🙏 for you and your wife and your 🙏 friends ok please 🙏 be careful out there ok 🙏 and please 🙏 be safe 🙏 ok 🙏 can you do more new show for all of us please we will be waiting for you ok you have a wonderful day and have a good night and day do you know I wach you as soon you come on ok love Lorilee xoxoxoxox
Didn't we see this a few weeks back?
Who knew you could use a hole-saw as a compass? LOL
The term "Lazy Susan" may come from servants in the 1700s who were called "Susans". "Susan" may have come to be a synonym for "servant", and "lazy Susan" may have referred to a servant who never had to leave. "Laziness" was a common complaint against servants at the time, so "lazy Susan" may have been a usual term since the 18th century.
Wow, first comment… been binging your cabinet build
Lol
"mm" is a unit of an alternative measurement system, it's used to measure small objects and is the abbreviation for "micro mile"
Also known as a Rotating Rita
I'm confused. Why would you have the weird hinged cabinet AND the lazy Susan? You only need one or the other. The whole point of the lazy Susan is so you don't have to do the weird hinged cabinet thing. The lazy Susan is supposed to swing out of the cabinet door on ONE SIDE so you can reach everything. The other side should just be a stationary cabinet wall. With the hinged door L shaped shelves would actually be a better use of space.
Along with Susan, why is Lorraine so dangerous that we have a song wondering who will stop her?
This is an honest question. I would like to know if you ever make mistakes on doors or hinges or cabinet carcasses that you don't put in the video. You just rebuild or repair without wasting any time? I mean I thought about it because I probably would. Sorry, I just wonder about things randomly.
😃👍🏼👊🏼
😮😮😮😮😮😮🎉
why do I have the feeling that I have seen this video before?
I thought a Lazy Suzan was a tray that goes on a table not a carousel for a corner cabinet. Next you are going to tell me butcher block is just a load of parallel sticks laying down and not a surface made of end grain pointing up.
Lol i learned that my wife will not get a lazy Susan lol
Am I stuck in the matrix? We’ve already seen this no?
Still not sure why it's called a lazy Suzan because it's a lot of work to make these boxes?
Well, in computer science, there is a saying : a good programmer is lazy, but he works hard to achieve that goal.
Today’s lesson: maybe don’t throw the instructions out 😂
I have 2 lazy Susan's in my kitchen and they are both so lazy they just sit there as doing nothing but holding everything that just stays there never ti see the light of day ever again
Im married to a lazy susan.
Why is it called "Lazy Susan" this is what google said, do not quote me on this.
One speculation is that the name derives from servants in the 1700s who were referred to as “Susan's.”
Another popular theory is that Thomas Jefferson invented them for his daughter, Susan, who often complained that she was always the last to be served at the dinner table.
Yes I'm first
Lol
This is completely unhinged
Those lazy Susan things do suck. I can’t stand them. But useful
Get a better attitude towards metric. There is a reason the rest of the world uses it. Measuring is with it. Most of your plywood you use is metric plywood and only given as a imperial approximation of 3/4
Aren't you tired of making shaker cabinets, I'm tired of watching you make them, oh yeah there are other colors than white
First time I hear it's called Lazy Susan hinges, I usually buy these from BLUM and they're know as bifold hinges.
I work in the UK kitchen industry you should try a magic corner
You know how you make a lazy Susan?
You marry her!!! Thankyou I’m here all week 😂.
Love the channel keep up the great work Jason. 🇦🇺
Savage American imperial system! Glory to the metric system!
"I have a twelve incher but I don't use it as a rule." just doesn't work in the metric system.
@@fatroberto3012 you would like it better if you could say I have a 304.8 mm...sounds much bigger
@@fatroberto3012 12 only. Not a 30 ?
My doors are inset and attached to the lazy Susan’s and spin with the trays.