Millwork Panel Trims from Flannery are built with a wider face key (or face leg) to allow the millworker to tuck their panels under and avoid the cost of finishing the panel edges. While the installation of these trims is similar to working a jigsaw puzzle, the aesthetic that is achieved is both modern and natural.
Products and Features
- Wood Panel Reveal: Creates an aesthetic reveal between two millwork panels. This is an attractive alternative to butting one panel to another, so the design is clean and hides unfinished panel edges.
- Wood Panel H-Mold: Creates a vertical “flat-face” reveal between two adjoining Millwork Panels and is an attractive alternative to butting one panel to another.
- Wood Panel J-Mold: An edge trim, which helps finish millwork panels that terminate against dissimilar materials such as doors or windows.
- Wood Panel Inside Corner: Creates a sharp and crisp corner where millwork is installed on walls that meet at a 90° inside corner joint. The Inside Corner trim creates a solid and clean corner for the siding system which would normally require the two pieces of siding to be laid together at an inside corner.
- Wood Panel X-Mold: An outside corner trim that creates an aesthetic reveal where two millwork panels come together at an outside 90° corner. The face flange on each side covers the edge of the panels without requiring them to be mitered at the edge.
- Wood Panel Outside Corner: An outside corner trim that creates a sharp aesthetic corner where two millwork panels come together at an outside 90° corner. The face flange on each side of the trim covers the edge of the panels and may require them to be mitered at the edge.
Material and Finish Options
Flannery’s Millwork Panel Trims are standard extruded aluminum alloy 6063 T5 and have a typical .050” nominal wall thickness. Aluminum Millwork Panel Trims are aesthetic trims which are not intended to hold or support the weight of any panel system.
Installation Instructions
Flannery’s Millwork Panel Trims must be installed in a planned order to avoid installation errors. Projects should be started at one of the lower side elevations and move up and over as the wall pattern is laid out. Framing should provide a backer so that moldings can be attached with approved fastening methods at 16” or 24” on center.