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You know how flat panel tvs can be mounted with no visible power cords? That's the design I'm going after - simple and wife-friendly.
I wouldn't trust my MP RSD-15's on a shelf with no bracket . Who designed that , the same engineers that designed the Tacoma Narrows Bridge ?
Perhaps folks could also do an 'around the corner' design using the long shelf and short shelf in a "L" shape. Just a suggestion as not everyone has a room with 10 linear feet (other than a living room)
I have a Ikea 6 foot high double door cabinet ( I don't remember that they called it anymore ) that I use in my den for trains . It was designed to fall apart . I had to beef up all the joints and put aftermarket hinges , and strengthened the floor . I , for my own reasons and added casters . Had I not strengthened it , it wouldn't have been my thinking that was outside of the box , it would have been my trains . While they have some stuff that is well designed , and I have 8 other items that are well made , not everything Ikea is so . The store floor plan comes to mind . It stinks , as well as all those meaningless names they shove in our face . That shelf is also not well engineered , unless it is used as a shelf that is protected by being within a box . What kind of designed weight is 16-33 pounds . Weasel words is what that is . Like the phrase some throw at us "We only use genuine parts " Useless fodder for idiots to find comfort in . I know enough to know that shelf shouldn't be used for anything you care about , or used if there is a chance of it accidentally being pried up or down . 16 pounds and what to you get , your stuff on the floor , and crease marks on your wall . Then once the bolts bend , try removing the shelf without causing more damage . The shelf is of poor design for most uses .
Quote from: up1950s on July 26, 2006, 04:42:51 AMI have a Ikea 6 foot high double door cabinet ( I don't remember that they called it anymore ) that I use in my den for trains . It was designed to fall apart . I had to beef up all the joints and put aftermarket hinges , and strengthened the floor . I , for my own reasons and added casters . Had I not strengthened it , it wouldn't have been my thinking that was outside of the box , it would have been my trains . While they have some stuff that is well designed , and I have 8 other items that are well made , not everything Ikea is so . The store floor plan comes to mind . It stinks , as well as all those meaningless names they shove in our face . That shelf is also not well engineered , unless it is used as a shelf that is protected by being within a box . What kind of designed weight is 16-33 pounds . Weasel words is what that is . Like the phrase some throw at us "We only use genuine parts " Useless fodder for idiots to find comfort in . I know enough to know that shelf shouldn't be used for anything you care about , or used if there is a chance of it accidentally being pried up or down . 16 pounds and what to you get , your stuff on the floor , and crease marks on your wall . Then once the bolts bend , try removing the shelf without causing more damage . The shelf is of poor design for most uses . Hey man, I hear you about Ikea stuff (junque?). Their stuff is designed for young folks who don't want or can't spend a lot on furniture. But this shelf is simple and has no moving parts or joints, so it'll work. I doubt there will be more than 2 pounds of switching layout on it at any time.
Well Richie, IKEA is a multi-million dollar company. I'm sure their product liability insurance riders alone would guarantee that anything they sell gets tested to the hilt. Forward thinking companies are the ones that succeed. Disco was here to stay too, remember? Sometimes you need to think outside the box.
Quote from: sparky on July 26, 2006, 02:42:53 AMWell Richie, IKEA is a multi-million dollar company. I'm sure their product liability insurance riders alone would guarantee that anything they sell gets tested to the hilt. Forward thinking companies are the ones that succeed. Disco was here to stay too, remember? Sometimes you need to think outside the box.Their founder, Ingvar Kamprad is worth over $50 Billion, so what they are doing must work.
Their founder, Ingvar Kamprad is worth over $50 Billion, so what they are doing must work.
What a lot of work! But I could climb on it without worry.
Quote from: rschaffter on July 26, 2006, 05:27:49 PMTheir founder, Ingvar Kamprad is worth over $50 Billion, so what they are doing must work. ...and he is still driving his old Volvo 245 !