Homeowners want to know how hinges are positioned so cabinet doors hang evenly, what the 35mm cup drill is and whether they can do it themselves, and how soft-close is adjusted when it slams or won't latch. A website that explains cabinet hardware earns the installation call. Free mockup, no commitment.
For Cabinet Hardware Installation in KC
Web Design for Cabinet Hardware Installation Companies in Kansas City
Cabinet hardware installation customers are KC homeowners upgrading a kitchen with new pulls and knobs after a paint or refacing project, homeowners replacing old hinges after a cabinet reface and needing the new European cup hinges installed and adjusted, or homeowners adding soft-close drawer slides to existing cabinet boxes to reduce noise in an open kitchen. The central education is cup hinge drilling, drawer slide alignment, and soft-close adjustment — three things that require jigs and calibration to do quickly and correctly across a full kitchen of 32 or more door and drawer openings. Cup hinge drilling: European-style concealed hinges use a 35mm cup hole drilled into the door face — the hinge arm mounts in the cup; the cup must be drilled at the correct depth (typically 13mm) and at the correct setback from the door edge (standard is 22mm from the edge to the center of the cup) — incorrect setback or depth causes the hinge arm to bind or the door to sit at the wrong reveal distance from the cabinet face frame; production-rate hinge installation uses a dedicated drill jig (Blum Minipress or manual jig) to drill every cup at the same position without measuring each one — drilling freehand across 20 doors accumulates error; hinge position from the top and bottom of the door (hinge spacing) is set by the cabinet manufacturer standard — typically 3–4 inches from the door corner; three hinges per door are standard for doors taller than 36 inches. Drawer slides: undermount drawer slides (Blum Tandem, Grass Dynapro) require the drawer box to be sized to the slide specification — drawer box width must be 1 inch narrower than the cabinet opening; the slides mount to the bottom of the cabinet sides at a precise height (typically centered on the bottom rail) so the drawer front aligns with adjacent doors and drawers; side-mount slides require the drawer box width to be exactly 1/2 inch narrower on each side; all drawer slides require a level and square cabinet box — a cabinet box that is out of square by even 1/8 inch causes the slide to bind at full extension. Soft-close adjustment: soft-close hinges and drawer slides have adjustment screws that control the damping speed — if the door or drawer slams, the damping force is too low; if it moves too slowly and does not fully close, the damping is too aggressive; Blum hinges have a soft-close tension wheel on the clip body — rotating it adjusts the closing force without removing the hinge; drawer slide damping cartridges are replaced rather than adjusted if they fail to close; a full kitchen of soft-close hardware needs one calibration pass after initial installation as the damping settles into consistent operation. A cabinet hardware website that explains the 35mm cup standard, why drawer slides require precise box sizing, and how soft-close is adjusted earns the homeowner who wants hardware that works the same on every door and drawer from day one.
What homeowners research before cabinet hardware installation
- Cup hinge drilling — 35mm cup standard, 22mm setback from edge, depth requirement, jig vs. freehand
- Hinge spacing — position from door corner, three hinges for tall doors, cup position effect on door reveal
- Drawer slide sizing — 1-inch narrower box rule for undermount, side-mount clearance, square box requirement
- Soft-close adjustment — damping tension wheel, slam vs. won't-close diagnosis, cartridge replacement
- Pull and knob placement — center of rail standard, consistent placement template, boring jig method
What your cabinet hardware installation website would include
- Cup hinge section — 35mm drill standard, setback and depth specs, jig method vs. freehand error accumulation
- Hinge spacing guide — top and bottom position from corner, three-hinge rule, reveal distance adjustment
- Drawer slide section — undermount vs. side-mount sizing, box width rule, square box requirement
- Soft-close guide — adjustment method, slam vs. no-close diagnosis, cartridge vs. adjustment fix
- Pull placement section — center-of-rail standard, template method for consistent placement across full kitchen
- Quote form with door count, drawer count, existing hardware type, soft-close upgrade, timeline
What clients say
“The soft-close adjustment section turned service calls into upsells. Before, customers who had soft-close that wasn't working would call and I'd come out for a callback. After the section went up explaining what the adjustment wheel does and when the cartridge needs replacing, customers came in knowing the difference between an adjustment job and a parts job. Two of them decided to upgrade all their slides to current Blum Tandem while I was there — that's a $600 job from a section that explained the difference between a $40 fix and a real upgrade. The cup hinge section also filtered out DIY customers who thought they could do it without a jig — they read the error accumulation part and called me instead.”
— P. Navarro, cabinet installation and hardware, Leawood, KS
Simple pricing
A cabinet hardware site with cup hinge section, soft-close guide, and quote form starts at $200. A full site with drawer slide sizing, pull placement template, and adjustment content is $425–$750. One kitchen hardware installation covers the cost. No contracts, no monthly fees.
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