artbot
New Member
for those of you that have to crate occasionally. it's a drag. and it usually looks like an industrial orwellian widget is inside.
i took to figuring out a super quick, light, strong crating system over the last several shipments and i think this is maybe a beta of the final design.
it consists of:
-hard bottom (3/4" pine board with 1/8" grooves @1/2" all the way around) ...could also be plywood, grooved to save last layer of wood.
-luan sides that glue into the grooves
-a similar hard lid (as bottom) with grooves that screws down onto the luan sides for easy removal.
-small notched out fingers to secure the sides. one could do this the length of the corner. but this crate is only 28lb and just needs a secure corner. urethane wood glue is a must for this connection. i
stapled mine on until the glue expanded/cured.
in shipment the corners take a lot of abuse. drywall screws split the strength of the wood and get all frayed up. also, keeping a "perimeter" around the piece means that the base and bottom, and fingers
at the corners protect the sides from being compressed over the long drive to the shipment. the edge surrounding also allows for the shipping to have "something to grab" when picking up the crate.
i took to figuring out a super quick, light, strong crating system over the last several shipments and i think this is maybe a beta of the final design.
it consists of:
-hard bottom (3/4" pine board with 1/8" grooves @1/2" all the way around) ...could also be plywood, grooved to save last layer of wood.
-luan sides that glue into the grooves
-a similar hard lid (as bottom) with grooves that screws down onto the luan sides for easy removal.
-small notched out fingers to secure the sides. one could do this the length of the corner. but this crate is only 28lb and just needs a secure corner. urethane wood glue is a must for this connection. i
stapled mine on until the glue expanded/cured.
in shipment the corners take a lot of abuse. drywall screws split the strength of the wood and get all frayed up. also, keeping a "perimeter" around the piece means that the base and bottom, and fingers
at the corners protect the sides from being compressed over the long drive to the shipment. the edge surrounding also allows for the shipping to have "something to grab" when picking up the crate.