I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to a,
say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
solution?
TIA
Norm
Norm Dresner wrote:
> I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
> thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to a,
> say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
> mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
> solution?
> TIA
> Norm
Maybe a keyboard tray but they are usually bulky. Try here:
http://www.rockler.com/CategoryView.cfm?Cat_ID=11
or here:
http://www.leevalley.com/hardware/index.aspx?c=2
But be careful... I just got my first Lee Valley catalog and my list of
'must have' tools is growing with every page turn.
what does your handmade solution look like ?
Any photos ?
Norm Dresner wrote:
> I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
> thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to a,
> say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
> mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
> solution?
> TIA
> Norm
Tue, Nov 14, 2006, 3:24pm (EST+5) [email protected] (Norm=A0Dresner) doth
proclaimeth:
I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and
generally thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and
drop down to a, say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are
there any slide mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my
own, handmade, solution?
Well, if you want to look a bit I'm pretty sure there's some
mechanism out there that'll do it. Could be costy tho. And bulky.
If you want to make your own, I've seen some along those lines.
Some used a dowel extending out a bit on each side of the drawer, then a
stop on each side. There's different variations, but no rocket science
involved. Sit down and think on it for a few minutes and you should be
able to come up with something that'll work.
Or, you could just slide the drawer out completely, then either lay
it flat or at an angle, to look at the tool(s). I'd probably go for
this option.
JOAT
Democratic justice. One man, one rock.
On Tue, 14 Nov 2006 15:24:16 GMT, "Norm Dresner" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
>thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to a,
>say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
>mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
>solution?
I guess I don't see how dropping it down at an angle is any better
than a full extension slide?
-Leuf
On Tue, 14 Nov 2006 15:24:16 GMT, "Norm Dresner" <[email protected]>
wrote:
>I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
>thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to a,
>say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
>mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
>solution?
> TIA
> Norm
Norm - You might play around with Pivoting Door Slides. Maybe buy a
cheap one and see if you could rig it up to satisfy your requirement.
I believe if you apply the slide 90' to standard and attach a drawer
to it, the drawer would slide out and the front edge would tip
down....maybe not quite 45' but enough to result in a good view.
Anyway, just a thought.
Good Luck,
J
"Norm Dresner" <[email protected]> wrote:
> I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and
> generally thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and
> drop down to a, say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are
> there any slide mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using
> my own, handmade, solution?
> TIA
> Norm
>
Google: under cabinet holder
I've seen just the mechanism sold somewhere. Thought it was Lee Valley or
Rockler, but can't find it there.
"Lobby Dosser" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:n_O6h.7363$bj1.4698@trndny05...
> "Norm Dresner" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and
>> generally thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and
>> drop down to a, say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are
>> there any slide mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using
>> my own, handmade, solution?
>> TIA
>> Norm
>>
>
> Google: under cabinet holder
>
> I've seen just the mechanism sold somewhere. Thought it was Lee Valley or
> Rockler, but can't find it there.
Same here. Though I think it was to hold a cook book or a spice rack, some
thing like that.I'd check the kitchen sections for it.
Jim
"Leuf" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
| On Tue, 14 Nov 2006 15:24:16 GMT, "Norm Dresner" <[email protected]>
| wrote:
|
| >I want to build a cabinet for some tools that are very flat and generally
| >thin. What I'd like is a set of drawers that slide out and drop down to
a,
| >say, 45 degree angle so I can see the whole tool. Are there any slide
| >mechanisms available that do this or am I stuck using my own, handmade,
| >solution?
|
| I guess I don't see how dropping it down at an angle is any better
| than a full extension slide?
Takes less space.
Norm
Tue, Nov 14, 2006, 11:47pm (EST+5) [email protected] (Norm=A0Dresner) doth
claimeth:
=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0=A0Takes less space.
Don't see that happening, you've got to pull it all the way out
before you tilt it.
JOAT
Democratic justice. One man, one rock.
|"J T" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
| Tue, Nov 14, 2006, 11:47pm (EST+5) [email protected] (Norm Dresner) doth
|claimeth:
|Takes less space.
|
| Don't see that happening, you've got to pull it all the way out
|before you tilt it.
But the space it takes when it's pulled out is up in the air. As it drops
down toward the work surface it takes only half that much area on table.
Norm
Sat, Nov 18, 2006, 12:56pm (EST+5) [email protected] (Norm=A0Dresner) doth
sayeth:
But the space it takes when it's pulled out is up in the air. As it
drops down toward the work surface it takes only half that much area on
table.
Understood. If I wanted something like what you want, I'd K.I.S.S.
it. Pull-out drawers, prop up, or on a fold-up stand. Hang the cabinet
on the wall, under the work top, or even on wheels, hang the stand when
not used - no work space lost.
Or, you can make it all gimmicky.
JOAT
Democratic justice. One man, one rock.