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Subject: Re: Solid wood drawers

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Message Thread:

Solid wood drawers

11/29/18       
Willem Martins  Member

Website: thelastwoodworker.com

For solid wood drawer sides and ends, do you make your own, or do you buy dimensioned lumber?

If you make your own, plane or re-saw?

11/29/18       #2: Solid wood drawers ...
Dustin orth

Website: http://customwoodmontrose.com

We use all solid soft maple at 5/8 thick. All dovetailed in house. All material comes in at 15/16, yielded out on the straight line rip, glued up to maximize sizes then run thru the moulder to get down to thickness. All drawers less than 9" go that way, bigger will go thru the planer, then all get finished in the widebelt. All stock is then racked until it's needed. We generally use only 4 sizes for both rollouts and drawers so that makes stock levels easy to see and decide how much to bring in.

11/29/18       #3: Solid wood drawers ...
Ryan

How can one make one building and finishing solid wood dovetail boxes when places like hardware resources sell them so cheap? We would need one if not 2 more guys to keep up with the number of drawers that we buy and thats a lot to add to payroll.

11/29/18       #4: Solid wood drawers ...
Dustin orth

Since we make all high end custom and have the tooling and employees that can make our drawers in house we will continue to do so. Our normal kitchen or house job has around 50 drawers and only takes us around 3 to 4 man days it makes sense to keep it in house.

11/29/18       #5: Solid wood drawers ...
Ken Member

Simple Ryan, cost analyses. How much are 50 boxes from Hardware Resources vs cost of man hours to produce in house. It may not make sense for a 1 or 2 man shop with manual machines but if you have the equipment it may.

11/29/18       #6: Solid wood drawers ...
Willem Martins  Member

Website: thelastwoodworker.com

I also make all my own drawer boxes. I can beat prefab box prices every day.

Current kitchen Beech drawer boxes with pre finished Maple ply bottoms.

We got a bunch of Beech at an auction, getting 14mm out of resawing two per board.

I believe if set up properly, it is well worthwhile doing in-house.

11/30/18       #7: Solid wood drawers ...
Ryan

So are y'all prefinishing the stock and then cutting to length and running it through the dovetailer? I know that you can get a dovetail machine in the 15-20k range which isn't all that bad.
Then my question comes in Dustin if you have 3-4 days in 50 boxes then 24-32 hours. Which if my math is right is $37-$41 labor in a box if your shop rate is $65 (in my area thats a good average) an hour. On average over 50 boxes I am paying right at $40 a box for solid 5/8 maple dovetail boxes delivered to my door.

11/30/18       #8: Solid wood drawers ...
Ryan

I don't want my last post to sound like I am coming off rude. I am just trying to think through the cost of doing it.

I can see where is makes since if you are trying to get them in a quicker time frame as it normally takes 2-2.5 weeks from the time we order to get them.

When we run into a small job which isn't normall for us. We normally work in very high end 7,000 plus sqft. homes in a lake community. We will run it by the customer and if they want their cabinet quicker than we can get the boxes in then we will cut prefinished on the cnc and edge band the tops on the boxes.

11/30/18       #9: Solid wood drawers ...
Dustin orth

Website: http://customwoodmontrose.com

The material is not prefinished on the rack. We cut the ready blanks to length, dovetail, assemble, sand and fill voids then spray . With where we are located the shipping costs are not good compared to building in house. We also use wormy maple for the material, our customers really like it, most suppliers charge a premium for that yet we don't pay a premium for the raw stock, less than anything else comparable. Plus I don't have to wait 2 weeks for a drawer order.

11/30/18       #10: Solid wood drawers ...
JeffM

I haven't found a drawer box company yet that is cost efficient built the way I want them and shipped. For me to build one, material is less than $5 per box and labor is minimal. I get my material 13/16", run though the planer one time to 11/16 and run through wide belt. Cut grooves for bottoms on TS then finish the insides. Dovetail all around (faster than dadoing the back) and assemble with glue and pins (no real need to clamp the boxes). Rout the top edge...sand and finish.

11/30/18       #11: Solid wood drawers ...
Hen Bob Member

For the guys building them in house, in real time how long does it take to finish the drawer? I would think two coats would be necessary to get a smooth surface be it solvent or WB

11/30/18       #12: Solid wood drawers ...
MarkB Member

Im in Jeff's camp. We buy hard maple s2s SLR1e for cheap. 15/16 plane to thickness, dovetail, and ply bottoms. Dont know about others but our jobs usually have a fair amount of deep pots/pans drawers and I have never had my average number for a job worth of drawers that we've sent out to bid come back a 50 bucks a drawer average. Maybe for shallow silverware drawers but when you start getting into a lot of 6", 9", and deeper, drawers the numbers go way up. We have a good bit less than $10 total in materials in a large box that would probably come in at $100 bucks to bring in including freight. If we cant build a box in-house for $90 bucks after materials we have no business being in business.

I can easily see in a large operation production cabs where your covered up with work outsourcing stuff like this all day long. Our customers however pay a bit more and they have walked out of the shops that outsource everything they touch. They ask specifically what "we" make, and are also interested in the fact that the hardwood in our work comes from entirely within the state.

11/30/18       #13: Solid wood drawers ...
JeffM

Hen Bob.
I can finish all of the insides of my drawer pieces in about an hour. After assembly, I can finish the exteriors in 2-3 hours including dry time and sponge sanding. One sealer coat and a double full coat...meaning i spray it twice but while the first coat is still somewhat wet. I guess you could call it 3 coats.

11/30/18       #14: Solid wood drawers ...
Hen Bob Member

I absolutely get the material cost aspect of doing them in house, our bottleneck is finishing, and the time of moving them around for drying, scuff sanding etc.. drawers take more room than a vertical rack of doors. Our labor rate is higher due to location and overhead.

11/30/18       #15: Solid wood drawers ...
Leo G Member

I agree with MarkB about the non average drawer. The top line of drawers in a kitchen, ie: 4" tall drawers, are relatively inexpensive to order. But as soon as you get into tall drawers the price skyrockets. I basically build my drawers with Baltic Birch plywood which makes material processing a cinch. I have a manual dovetail machine. As long as the drawer is less than 8" it's two passes per box. Taller than that and I have to do each corner separately.

12/2/18       #16: Solid wood drawers ...
Adam

We do it all of those ways.

Order them when we are busy and can work around the manufacturing/shipping times. As others have noted the big ones are expensive for them to make and ship.

We've got drawer company within an hour who make good cheap drawers. We often use them for wardrobes, vanities.

Most kitchens we've made in 15 years always have huge drawers for this and that. As well as some "interesting" designed drawer liners. We do a lot of library/studies. Likewise these are not typical drawers.

As far as materials. Depending on the project we will use hard white maple or baltic birch. Customer typically makes the call based on cost.

Our finish is MLC wb Agualente. Its got this really cool waxy finish. 2 coats gets the job done. They don't smell like CV or laquer for the next month.

12/3/18       #17: Solid wood drawers ...
Mark Member

Mark B,

I think you need to go back and look at your numbers.

A large box can easily have 8 1/2 sq ft of material, so depending on your yield, you'll need to add to that number. Now factor in the sq footage for your ply bottom and you're closer to $20-22.

1&2 White hard maple is still over $2 bd ft, especially with the spec you are bringing it in at.

12/4/18       #18: Solid wood drawers ...
MarkB Member

A little low but not by much but of course the size of the box your ballparking has everything to do with it. We dont pay anywhere near $2 a foot for the hard Maple we use on drawer boxes. The last unit we brought in was #1 common, S2S SLR1E-15/16-stain and we pay about $0.88/BF for it. By the time its down to draw box material its clean no-stain. A 7x24x21 box figuring way high is about 5.5BDft figuring taking if from 8" material and an extra half a foot for waste which is ridiculously high puts you at 4.84. Another $6-7 for a domestic bottom, more like $4 if we were running import.

12/4/18       #19: Solid wood drawers ...
MarkB Member

Mark,

So now Ive given you my rough numbers, so what are your specific numbers for a 7x24x21 box, materials only, and then what would that box cost you to buy in raw, flat?

12/4/18       #20: Solid wood drawers ...
Mark Member

Mark B,

1C 1&2 White is running $1.60 bd delivered ft in full units. SEL & BET stain is $1.70 delivered. Never priced 1C stain.

7 x 24 x 21" $47 finished and assembled in white HM is what I sell that box for.

Mark

12/5/18       #21: Solid wood drawers ...
MarkB Member

As a drawer manufacturer? $47 fully assembled, clear finish, plus shipping?

12/5/18       #22: Solid wood drawers ...
Mark Member

Mark B

Yes, I'm a regional manufacturer and have never pursued out of state business.

The reality of drawer boxes is that every major metropolitan area can support an operation like mine.

Before you ask, I'm in Pontiac MI

Mark

12/8/18       #23: Solid wood drawers ...
Daniel P Member

I get my drawers from Hardware Resource my only gripe with them is they use very little glue in their joints. I got a order once and the joints were coming apart when I got them I had to reglue some. I did call them and complained for what little good that did.

 

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