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Default Advice on pantry needed (0/1) - shelf.png (1/1)

maybe dowel pegs that can be un-plugged, but that sounds difficult to match
up.

I have a piece of pegboard that I use as a guide when drilling holes for
shelf pegs. You can use a piece of dowel on the drill bit to drill them all
the same depth or just a piece of tape on the drill. Clamp the pegboard
piece on the work and drill through the existing holes that are in it then
do the same to the other side. All of your holes will align from side to
side.



"Andrew Erickson" wrote in message
...
In article ,
wrote:
I have this old pantry cupboard that I am re-building, and I decided to
add
thick doors that will hold cans and small boxes. The front of the doors
will
have panels matching the rest of the kitchen. (old pine)

I'm kind of designing and building as I go... it's a real hobby for me!

I decided to use fiber board for the partitions, as you can see in the
photos.

Any advice on holding all this together would be appreciated! I would
like
the
option to move things around and change sizes if necessary... I was
thinking
of
maybe dowel pegs that can be un-plugged, but that sounds difficult to
match
up.


If I were doing this, I'd either use one of the many prebuilt adjustable
shelf bracket systems (usually involving clips that fit into a
perforated strip or into one of a series of holes drilled in the frame),
or else construct and attach a series of notched supporting battens
something like in the attached sorry attempt at a sketch. Only one is
shown, but you'd presumably want a bunch evenly spaced on either side of
the frame, at maybe 1 or 2 inch intervals. The shelf could be slid in
between any set of these, and then rests in the long notched-out portion
and is held in position by the dog at the end and the lip on the frame
at the far side.

--
Andrew Erickson

"He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot
lose." -- Jim Elliot