First of all, I am a bit confused.  It seems you asked a question then
answered it yourself.

 

Regardless, I would not run screws through the inside back of a kitchen
cabinet.  There is a top and bottom rail on the outside of the cabinet for
this purpose.  No washers are required because the wood is three quarters of
an inch (usually) and very hard.  If you run a screw through the back of the
cabinet into the wall and then load the cabinet with heavy items such as
canned goods, you can rip the cabinet right off the wall except for the
backing plate.

 

  _____  

From: [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
On Behalf Of Ray Boyce
Sent: Saturday, December 13, 2008 4:43 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: [BlindHandyMan] Repair a Kitchen Cabinet

 

I noticed only three of the six screws that hold my kitchen cabinets on the
wall are anchored in a stud. The other three were so loose that they pulled
out of the wall with my fingers. How do I fix this? 

The installers must have missed the studs when fastening the cabinet. The
screws that pulled away were likely only fastened to drywall or plaster and
they stripped out from the weaker material. The easiest way to locate the
studs is to use a stud finder above or below the cabinet case. Once you know
the wall stud location, you can measure inside the cabinet to locate where
you'll drive a screw through the back of the case and into the stud. The
stud is probably just to the left or right of the existing screw hole. Use
screws that are a minimum of 2-1/2 inches, and choose fasteners with large
heads or washers to make sure the cabinets cinch up to the wall. 

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