This Old House – September 2019

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four 1


3

⁄ 4 -inch fl athead screws, a


screwdriver, and a small tube of


polyurethane construction


adhesive, such as PL Premium


(loctiteproducts.com).


To start, pull the exposed


staples and scrape the old glue


residue off the drawer box and the


back of the drawer front. Slide the


box partway out , hold it in place


with clamps, and run a bead of


the adhesive over the exposed


particleboard at the ends of the


box’s sides. Bed the box front


into the adhesive, then clamp it to


the box. Use the clamps holding


the box open as anchor points


for this second pair.


While you’re waiting for the


adhesive to cure, take the


countersink bit and drill two pilot


holes through each side of the


drawer and into each end of the


particleboard drawer-box front.


Make sure the countersink is deep


enough to recess the screwheads—


you don’t want them to hit the


cabinet stiles when opening or


closing the drawer—then drive a


screw into each hole. Cover the


heads and fi ll the recesses with a


fast-setting, polyester wood fi ller,


such as Minwax High-Performance


Wood Filler (minwax.com).


After the adhesive cures and the


clamps are removed , you’ll never


have to worry about that drawer


front coming off again.


Fix for short doors


A mold problem last year


prompted us to remove all of our


carpeting and put in hardwood


fl oors. Now there’s a big 1


3

⁄ 8 -inch


gap at the bottom of the interior


wood doors. How do you close


up these gaps and still have the


door look okay?


—JIMMY JONES, GARNER, NC


BROUGHT TO YOU BY

Gas dryer install


We have a gas furnace and want to run another gas line up to


our laundry room so we can use a gas dryer. Is this something we


can do ourselves? —ALISON SCHMALZIGAN, ARVADA, CO


RICHARD TRETHEWEY REPLIES: In a word, no. Most municipalities


require this sort of work to be done by a licensed plumber. And


even if your town has no explicit rules against DIY installations,


the risk of an explosion or fi re is too great to even think about


doing this work yourself.


Having said that, you do have a few installation options to


consider. For instance, there’s more than one way to pipe gas


through a home. The traditional method—the one I prefer in most


cases—uses lengths of rigid, black iron pipe. (Actually, it’s made of


mild steel with a black iron-oxide coating.) These inexpensive pipes


are threaded on both ends; they connect to threaded fi ttings sealed


with pipe dope.


Another option is corrugated stainless-steel (CSST) gas pipe.


Because it’s fl exible, no intermediate fi ttings are needed: One end


connects to the gas line, the other connects to the appliance. CSST


is more expensive than black pipe, but the labor it saves in certain


long-run or retrofi t situations may outweigh the extra cost. Note:


CSST’s thin walls are vulnerable to electrical arcing during a


lightning strike, so building codes require this pipe to be


connected—“bonded”—to the house ground.


The venting of gas dryers is also strictly regulated. They have to


be vented to the outside through a 4-inch duct no more than 35 feet


long (less if there are bends), and the exhaust vent can’t


be any closer than 3 feet from a window. The safest


duct is smooth-wall, 26-gauge galvanized steel. Flexible


duct can be used only if it’s UL-listed—look for the


UL 2158A marking—and no more than 8 feet long.


Richard


Trethewey shows


homeowner


Haven Nichols the


fl exible 4-foot


appliance


connector that


conveys gas from


a rigid iron pipe


to his dryer.


These connectors


don’t need to


be grounded.


DIY SMARTS


ONLINE


Find more


information


about this


topic—and


others—at


thisoldhouse


.com/DIY-


smarts


34 THISOLDHOUSE.COM SEPTEMBER/OCTOBER 2019 40 YEARS


DIY


SMARTS

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