Results 1 to 15 of 15
Thread: Curved shelving
-
20th June 2006, 06:11 PM #1New Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2006
- Location
- Melb
- Posts
- 4
Curved shelving
Hey guys,
I just finished fitting out a warehouse apartment. To hide a column in the entrance I decided to build a storage cupboard and build around the column to hide it. So far so good. I listened to advice to make the cupboard curved, as this will make it a feature in the entrance. And it does look good, however, I now have an empty cupboard with no shelving. I want to use melamine particleboard. The problem is cutting it and getting a smooth nice radius cut. I tried a Jigsaw but it was rough. The size of the shelves will be 1200 wide x 1200 deep curved on one side. Yeh, pretty big shelves. Any suggestions on how best to cut it?
-
20th June 2006, 06:31 PM #2
-
20th June 2006, 10:15 PM #3
Go to a cabinetmaker with a CNC router. It will take them all of 5 minutes to design and cut it. You will have to iron on the edgeband though.
-
21st June 2006, 10:34 AM #4New Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2006
- Location
- Melb
- Posts
- 4
Cheers guys.
-
21st June 2006, 12:47 PM #5New Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2006
- Location
- Melb
- Posts
- 4
BTW, anyone know cabinet makers in Melb with a CNC Router?
-
21st June 2006, 06:24 PM #6
i think in all honesty that noone with a $150,000 to $300.000
-
21st June 2006, 06:24 PM #7
i think in all honesty that noone with a $150,000 to $300.000 DOLLAR
-
21st June 2006, 06:37 PM #8
dont you hate that when you push the wrong buttons several times (apparently) what i was leading to was that someone with a massive investment in the machine will pretty much look at your curved shelves with a fair deal of distain,i think that the suggestion of the jigsaw and themplte sounds the best you can expect
-
21st June 2006, 07:17 PM #9Originally Posted by arms
In the last 3 years many small kitchen companies, (say 1-4 employees) started to embrace low cost CNC manufacturing technology. When I was manufacturing kitchens I had a Multicam flat bed CNC Router (picked it up for $70,000 second hand). I would make anything and everything with it. Signs, lettering, flat pack sub woofer speaker boxes for 'doof-doof cars (big earner even electric guitarbodys. Once the word got around I was inundated with weird and wonderful jobs. (and making very good money
Any time the machine sits idle it is not making money therefore small jobs like curved shelves would be snapped up by savvy CNC owners.
JJC, you could ring Multicam or Tekcel (Australian CNC router manufacturers) and ask them if there are any joinery shops near your suburb that has one of their machines.
Good luck.
-
21st June 2006, 08:30 PM #10Originally Posted by JJC
BTW there is also a formula for working out what radius you need for just part of a large circular arc, I'll dig it out if you need it.
Cheers
Michael
-
22nd June 2006, 06:31 PM #11
JJC
If you cannot find a CNC shop, you can do it yourself using a router and a 10mm square batten.
Working on the bottom of the bottom shelf mark where you want each edge and the centre of the curve to be. Next mark back from those points the radius of the router baseplate plus the batten thickness. Put bending screws into each of those three marks. Bend the batten around those three screws and clamp it in place. Route around the curve.
Use bottom shelf as the template for other shelves,
The screws are in the bottom of the bottom shelf so that the holes are invisible in the finished cupboard. A longer batten is easier to ben than a short one. Yuu can save some routing by roughly jigsawing the outline first.
Cheers
Graeme
-
26th June 2006, 12:21 PM #12New Member
- Join Date
- Jun 2006
- Location
- Melb
- Posts
- 4
Thanks for the suggestions.
One more question.
What will be the best way to support the shelf, esp on the curved side?
-
1st July 2006, 07:55 PM #13Originally Posted by JJC
Hi mate - I feel the best way to support your HUGE shelves will be to use flexible plywood as a front brace underneath - alternatively, you could use metal angle and slot one side and bend to suit. I would like to see pics of the cabinet first, then ascertain the most appropriate material and solution. Very nice idea though, a curved cabinet. I will post on that I love when I find it.
have funSteve
Kilmore (Melbourne-ish)
Australia
....catchy phrase here
-
1st July 2006, 07:59 PM #14
curved cabinet
Steve
Kilmore (Melbourne-ish)
Australia
....catchy phrase here
-
4th July 2006, 02:44 PM #15Originally Posted by JJC
He bought some 8mm threaded stainless steel rod from a disposals recycler and put it through the front middle of each shelf. A nut and washer below each shelf. Its invisible when the doors are closed and not obtrusive when they are open.
Quick, cheap and effective.
Cheers
Graeme
Similar Threads
-
Wardrobe Shelving ?
By John99 in forum KITCHENS, BATHROOMS, THEATRES, etcReplies: 18Last Post: 12th August 2005, 09:08 PM
Bookmarks