m

24/03/2006 4:42 PM

Collapsible wooden shelving?

I'm not a wood worker at all.

What I am is a guy going back to college late in life
and need advice

I need some kind of shelving that is light,
compactable, will break down and fit into a small
compact car for transport..... but when assembled can
hold up a small TV, computer printer, etc

I've seen metal shelving and carts at Sam's Wholesale
and Costco that fit these requirement but are still
heavy when broken down. I'm talking abt the wire mesh
shelving like you might see in food service industry or
a bakery.

Does there exist a similar concept for shelving made of
wood?

I just need all my "possessions" to be able to fit into
a compact car when I leave college for the summer

Advice?


This topic has 10 replies

m

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

26/03/2006 4:11 PM

Guess who <[email protected]> wrote:

>Plastic ties from the dollar store.

Great idea!

pd

"professorpaul"

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

24/03/2006 3:39 PM

Been there, done that...

You need less stuff <grin>

How about those plastic crates you put milk in? You can get them at a
place like Staples, etc. Use them for books, files, etc. When you are
done, load your stuff into them, and cart them home. For books, set on
edge, and stack them...

tt

"tom"

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

24/03/2006 9:32 PM

Tom H. wrote: snip>You might even use the crate idea instead of blocks,
but they are light so
you'll probably have to connect them to the boards in some manor.

Or at least
in the dormatory. Tom

TH

"Tom H"

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

25/03/2006 2:45 AM

When the wife and I were first married (1970) we didn't have a pot.
We made some shelving out of boards and decorative cement blocks.
The weight of the blocks keeps things together and they're cheap enough to
discard when finished.

You might even use the crate idea instead of blocks, but they are light so
you'll probably have to connect them to the boards in some manor.


<[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> I'm not a wood worker at all.
>
> What I am is a guy going back to college late in life
> and need advice
>
> I need some kind of shelving that is light,
> compactable, will break down and fit into a small
> compact car for transport..... but when assembled can
> hold up a small TV, computer printer, etc
>
> I've seen metal shelving and carts at Sam's Wholesale
> and Costco that fit these requirement but are still
> heavy when broken down. I'm talking abt the wire mesh
> shelving like you might see in food service industry or
> a bakery.
>
> Does there exist a similar concept for shelving made of
> wood?
>
> I just need all my "possessions" to be able to fit into
> a compact car when I leave college for the summer
>
> Advice?

PB

Pat Barber

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

27/03/2006 3:50 PM

Concrete blocks and shelves of any length. Buy the blocks and
the boards at the school location.

Spray can of black(or any other color) paint for blocks.

Buy the boards at Home Depot or Lowes.... Look for
melamine coated boards. They will be in the closet section.

Total cost $50 max....

When no longer needed, sit next to the street and it will be
taken care of.



[email protected] wrote:

> I'm not a wood worker at all.
>
> What I am is a guy going back to college late in life
> and need advice
>
> I need some kind of shelving that is light,
> compactable, will break down and fit into a small
> compact car for transport..... but when assembled can
> hold up a small TV, computer printer, etc

MD

"Michael Daly"

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

25/03/2006 5:47 AM


On 24-Mar-2006, [email protected] wrote:

> Does there exist a similar concept for shelving made of
> wood?

Ikea. Well, it sorta looks like wood. Some of it. Some of it really
is wood.

Mike

MD

"Michael Daly"

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

26/03/2006 10:10 PM


On 25-Mar-2006, Andy Dingley <[email protected]> wrote:

> My workshop shelving and wood racking is Ikea's "Sten" shelving. It's
> big, crude, cheap and held together with huge screws. I can't buy the
> raw timber for what they sell this stuff for.

I use the same stuff for the same reasons. Garage, basement etc.

Mike

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

25/03/2006 2:55 PM

On Sat, 25 Mar 2006 05:47:01 GMT, "Michael Daly" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Ikea. Well, it sorta looks like wood. Some of it. Some of it really
>is wood.

My workshop shelving and wood racking is Ikea's "Sten" shelving. It's
big, crude, cheap and held together with huge screws. I can't buy the
raw timber for what they sell this stuff for.

Gw

Guess who

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

25/03/2006 9:11 PM

On Sat, 25 Mar 2006 19:26:57 -0600, [email protected] wrote:

>"professorpaul" <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>How about those plastic crates you put milk in? You can get them at a
>>place like Staples, etc.
>
>Yep that might just work if there is some way to
>securely join them together to create a bigger
>structure that I need

Plastic ties from the dollar store.

m

in reply to [email protected] on 24/03/2006 4:42 PM

25/03/2006 7:26 PM

"professorpaul" <[email protected]> wrote:

>How about those plastic crates you put milk in? You can get them at a
>place like Staples, etc.

Yep that might just work if there is some way to
securely join them together to create a bigger
structure that I need


You’ve reached the end of replies