Built ins for the electronics

Monday, September 8, 2014

Hello there! Hope you had a wonderful weekend! We had a blast celebrating our 20 year high school reunion – I came from a large class of 600+ so we had a few events throughout the weekend. It was SO much fun.

I took a break from everything DIY until yesterday when I installed the herringbone tile on the fireplace surround (check out Instagram to see the progress!) – it went so much easier than I thought it would and I LOVE IT. I can’t wait to show you! But first I need to grout, seal and caulk everything.

Last week I worked on the doors to the cabinets quite a bit. If you remember we had the guys install these next to the fireplace to hold the TV electronics and other goodies:

built ins for electronics

Yet again I used kitchen cabinets to do this. :) OF COURSE I DID. They’re cheap and so easily customizable – can you blame me? I needed them to to be deeper than 12 inches (they come in 12 and 24 inches deep at the store and 24 was too deep) so the guys made some tweaks (built in the shelves, extended the sides) that turned out SO good. They are now about 18 inches deep and you would never know they are kitchen cabinets!

Because we were putting the electronics in there I knew we couldn’t keep the doors as they were. They need to have air circulation to breathe – keeping them too hot will wear out the electronics much faster.

I asked numerous experts about this before I went ahead by the way – all said this solution would work fine. Since all the TV stuff was moved over we have had the doors completely off so last week I started the process of opening up the middle part:

cutting insert out of cabinet door

These are cheaper doors so this process is much easier than say, with our kitchen cabinets where there really isn’t an “insert” – those are a lot nicer. The process will still be the same but on our kitchen cabinets I’d have to be a lot more careful with the jigsaw.

The first step was to drill some big holes for my jigsaw to get into. I did it in a few spots on the door:

cutting insert out of cabinet door

Here’s a closer look:

cutting insert out of cabinet door

And then I took the jigsaw and cut the whole piece out. This was my fourth door and by this one I had figured out a good method – I would cut close to the sides but not all the way up against them:

cutting insert out of cabinet door

That way I just had some thin slivers of wood to pull out. The thinner pieces were much easier to pull out and break if necessary. Does that make sense? If you cut further away from the edges you can’t get good leverage to pull them out:

cutting insert out of cabinet door

I just used a wrench and grabbed the wood till it broke and came out. On a few spots I’d have to use the jigsaw and cut up the edge as far as I could and then pull again so it would break. But once you get one piece out the rest come out fairly easily.

On a couple doors I had some stubborn spots that just wouldn’t budge:

So I just pushed them back in and sanded them down. You don’t see them later anyway (I’ll show that in a bit).

Again, a nicer cabinet door won’t have the piece that you can just pull out like this, but if you’re using unfinished cabinets like this it will work fine. Nicer doors will need to be cut right up to the edge – say if you’re adding glass to a door.

Because I needed something that would circulate air flow I knew I wanted to use the radiator metal sheeting – I LOVE this stuff. It’s not cheap, but I was able to get two doors out of one sheet and only had four doors.

It’s easily cut – I used my plastic scissor things from Bed Bath and Beyond (I use these for everything) and it cut it really well:

cutting radiator metal sheeting

This stuff isn’t super sharp but you probably want to wear some gloves if you’ve never cut metal.

I cut out each piece so that it was a bit bigger than the opening – making sure I had enough overlap to secure it to the back of the door:

I cut out around the hinges:

storage for tv electronics

And then I grabbed these small nails I already had – they just happened to be perfect for securing it to the back:

decorative insert in cabinet doors

It took some trial and error to find a sweet spot to nail them in – if I went too close to the opening you could see the tip of the nail on the other side. So I would move out just a bit and nail every few inches or so:

It worked great!

You can see that I had already painted the door frames before I installed this – it would be a major pain with it already on there.

From the front it looked fine but I knew I wanted to cover the area where the insert used to be:

Tiny little molding to the rescue! :) This is really itty bitty stuff I got at Lowe’s:

I used my nail gun to install it over those open areas:

I used wood glue as well – some of my nails were coming out the back of the door so that was another trial and error thing to figure out exactly where to nail.

But they turned out SO good! I love the look!:

metal sheeting on cabinet doors for electronics

I considered spray painting the metal a warmer color but when I tried it it looked weird so they’ll stay – I like how they are as is.

I love the design and it definitely helps keep things cool inside the cabinet. The other side has the same sheeting even though nothing is plugged in there – but they do offer enough privacy that you don’t see every little thing:

radiator metal on cabinet doors

The inside of that cabinet still needs to be painted and the whole built in needs some more spackle and one more coat of paint – so it’s not totally done just yet. But it’s CLOSER! :)

The brushed nickel can start to feel a little modern but I have plans to warm it all up – and then accessories will help as well. I’m hoping to get the tile grouted tonight and then sealed tomorrow – and then I’ll start on the upper wall above the fireplace. I have high hopes of getting this whole thing done this week.

Have you ever installed your own glass or insert into a cabinet? For glass the process would be similar – you’d just need to glue the glass down to the back and then cover the edges with small trim.

0 comments:

Post a Comment