Cabinet and Millwork Installation

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Mounting Wall Paneling

5/17/20       
Gary

I have used Z clips and Star anchors for mounting 3/4" thick wall panels but I'm wondering if there may be simpler ways to go about it ? How about just gluing the panels, aligning reveals and micro-pin in place. Then kicking off floor to ceiling posts for clamping pressure. ?

5/17/20       #2: Mounting Wall Paneling ...
Gary

It looks like, after reading through the AWI standards, that wall panels MUST have some sort of reveal or space between them to allow for expansion & contraction. Sound correct?

5/18/20       #3: Mounting Wall Paneling ...
Chris H

Website: https://www.csaw.com/lamello/

While I cannot speak to the AWI Quality Standards on this particular application, I will say that many of our customers have used the Tenso P-14 (with pre-load clips) to join hanging wall panels together once they've been hung on Z-clip/French-cleat type hardware. They then find many other uses for the P-System as well. Search around here on Woodweb for yourself. Use 'Lamello Zeta' or 'Lamello P-System' as search words as see what many of your colleagues have had to say about it!

https://www.csaw.com/lamello/p-system/lamello-tenso-p-14/

5/25/20       #4: Mounting Wall Paneling ...
Pat Gilbert

The most accepted way to do this is to use Z clips mounted to a sub panel and the finished panels. Then you layout and screw the sub panel to the wall and then clip the panels to sub panel.

The biggest time factor on paneling is laying out the location of the clips. The second factor is shimming the clips straight.

Mounting the clips on the sub panel alleviates the shimming required to get the clips straight and eliminates the layout on the layout of the location of the clips.

This would be done on a cnc router.

Similar to putting a drawer guide into cabinet and having to layout where the guide goes, not to mention unflat walls, compared to putting a drawer guide in with the 5mm holes already located for the guide.

The down side to this method is you have to have a gap at the top to allow for the clips being seated.

Star fasteners might work better if you have to have the top tight to the ceiling.

Star fasteners don't work that well with unflat surfaces

Either way I would use the sub panels, because the pinch point (bottle neck) on this is the layout.

Alan F used to talk about this but I couldn't find any of the posts in the search of the history of the wood web

5/25/20       #5: Mounting Wall Paneling ...
Pat Gilbert

OTOH if you can nail though the face, that would be a different story


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