I built a cabinet last year out of AC plywood ... this year I used MDF instead. It's every bit as strong as the AC with confirmat screws (no glue or dados required). A little Titebond doesn't hurt but it's fine without.
You don't need huge pine ledgers either ... I made my ledgers out of 3/4" x 3/4" MDF and I've already had my 80lb+ WG D9200 bolted into the cabinet and I didn't notice it falling apart ( ... all that does is add extra weight to the cabinet and take up space .. not that there's anything wrong with that

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Confirmat Screwsor
Hi-Lo Screws(5mm x 40mm --> 5/8" or 7mm x 50mm 3/4")
Actually I've used the 5mm starter kit for 3/4" ... worked just fine if you need to save yourself a little money ( ... one kit does an entire cabinet)
Save yourself some trouble and buy the correct screws when working with MDF, Melamine, or Particle Board ... especially when screwing into the so called "end grain" ... I guess MDF has end grain ... hehe
Regular wood screws work fine everywhere else though.
Also ... these screws come with a special step pilot bit ... perfect pilot holes everytime.
The reason the MDF splits most of the time is that most wood screws are tapered which means your pilot hole has to be just right for the upper part of the screw or it will split
The wood screw itself is usually tapered too ... so only a fraction of it is actually holding the joint togehter. That's the cause for the weak holding power.
... the main cause of splitting though is normally the tapered wood screw head itself. If you tighten the wood screw to much the tapered head usually ends up busting out the pilot hole (usually that last turn of the screw driver that ends up ruining your day .... lol)
With the right knowledge and tools you can accomplish much (btw ... stop by the
MAMEROOM forum sometime ... what's not covered in the plans I'll happily help you with (that's why the forum is there) ... I got a thread that almost walks you step by step through the building process ... I've built two UAII cabinets so I can help you through every step of the plans should you encounter a problem

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