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Browse All Products69 5/16'' (1760.5 mm) Drill-Center Pulls for Full-Height Architectural Panels
Where the 69 5/16 inch (1760.5 mm) center sits
The 1760.5 mm drill center is the imperial conversion of a metric spacing near 1760 mm, and it marks the architectural extreme of the appliance and panel pull range. A pull at this length spans the better part of a tall column from top to bottom, working as a structural element of the cabinet face rather than a piece of applied trim. It belongs on floor-to-ceiling pantry doors in custom kitchens with tall ceiling heights, on architectural panel applications in commercial residential design, and on integrated refrigeration where the panel face runs full height instead of breaking into separate door and drawer sections. Wine room doors in dedicated cellars and pulls spec'd for restaurant and hospitality projects also reach this scale. Hardware here is heavy solid-bar construction, essentially custom rather than stock, with mounting engineered for the loads and leverage a full-height panel creates.
How to measure and size up or down
Drill center is the on-center distance between the two mounting holes, not the overall length of the pull. Measure from the middle of one post to the middle of the other; that figure is what 1760.5 mm describes here. Because hardware at this scale is planned into the cabinet design documentation, the panel height and post placement are usually drawn before the pull is selected rather than chosen afterward. Sizing down, the next reference point in the standard range is 30 1/4 inch (768.3 mm), a far shorter span suited to conventional tall doors and large drawer banks. Pulls near 1760.5 mm have no practical step up in stock catalogs, so longer requirements are fabricated to the project. Brushed stainless, matte black, and bronze remain the most-common finish selections at this length, matching the architectural appliance pull pattern.
Coordinate with cabinet pulls and cabinet knobs.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the exact metric equivalent of the 69 5/16-inch drill-center measurement, and how is that conversion derived?
The 69 5/16-inch (69.3125 in) drill-center spacing converts to 1760.5 mm. The figure originates as a metric spec near 1760 mm that has been expressed in the nearest imperial fraction for North American specification documents. When ordering or verifying hardware, use 1760.5 mm as the controlling dimension and treat the inch fraction as a rounding artifact.
How do you measure an existing 69 5/16-inch center-to-center hole spacing on a full-height panel?
Measure from the center of one mounting hole to the center of the other — not from edge to edge of the holes. On a full-height panel pull of this scale, use a steel rule or tape held parallel to the pull axis and read the center-to-center distance. Because slight drilling errors are magnified at nearly 1760 mm, confirm the measurement at least twice before ordering replacement hardware or drilling a new panel.
How does the 69 5/16-inch (1760.5 mm) drill center compare to the adjacent 30 1/4-inch (768.3 mm) size, and which applications call for each?
The 69 5/16-inch size is more than twice the span of the 30 1/4-inch (768.3 mm) pull. The 30 1/4-inch size suits standard tall-door or large appliance panel sections where the panel face is divided into separate door and drawer zones; the 69 5/16-inch size is reserved for continuous, unbroken full-height panels — floor-to-ceiling pantry doors, integrated refrigeration columns, and wine room doors — where the pull must span the entire face as a structural design element rather than a section of it.
What door or panel height is required to accommodate a 69 5/16-inch (1760.5 mm) drill-center pull?
A pull with a 1760.5 mm center-to-center spacing requires a panel tall enough to leave structurally sound material above the top hole and below the bottom hole after drilling. In practice this means a finished panel height well above 1760.5 mm — typically a full-height cabinet column in a kitchen with elevated ceiling heights. Architectural specifications at this scale are project-specific; the pull length is determined during cabinet design documentation, not selected from a standard retail size range.
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