Alan m said:
i think this is a supior way of doing this job than shims..
over here we have leveling feet that screw to the bottom of the cabinet. we dont allow the sides of the cabinets to come down past the bottom. there is around 6" under the cabinets. each can be adjusted from the front (albe it mire aquard than this set up).
if we didnt have these i would use a product similer to this.
i have used shimes on 1 run of cabinets in the past and found it a pain in the asre. you think you are getting somewhere and then have to raise the whole lot up a 1/4". i will never use them again .
i know it is a lot dearer to use than shims but the labour saving will add and ballence out.
I agree that making shims is a little too time consuming, but installing with them is not. At least not if you know what youre doing. Re set an entire run of cabinets because you hit a high point in the room? Seriously? How about taking two minutes to trim the cabinets, then keep moving. Very easy and fast when using the TS.
The adjustable legs are garbage, slide a cabinet even a little and they break off. Great, now I have to flip the cabinet over and reinstall the leg(s). Not only that, but most of the high end cabinet manufacturers don't use adjustable feet, so it isn't even an option.
Shims settling? Once again, seriously? I can see this happening if you shim the cabinets up too high, like staking two shims at full height. Shouldn't be done.
I do sometimes send a little more time making sure everything is on plane, but take a look at the picture and you'll wonder why I even bother. Damn granite on the last few jobs is warped!