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View Full Version : Adjustable shelving and drawer slides



Brian Kincaid
11-20-2014, 2:22 PM
I would like to do a really nice medium/heavy duty adjustable shelf unit with drawers I can move as needed. I wanted to use some type of metal strap instead of 32mm system holes but I am not sure how I can interface a drawer slide to the metal strap. Any ideas?

-Brian

Michael Roland
11-20-2014, 2:55 PM
Search for "QuikTray Rollout Shelf Systems" that are used to retrofit drawers in kitchen cabinet bases. If your application will not home the vertical supports the concept should at least give you ideas for creating something similar

Lee Schierer
11-20-2014, 3:23 PM
Search for "QuikTray Rollout Shelf Systems" that are used to retrofit drawers in kitchen cabinet bases. If your application will not home the vertical supports the concept should at least give you ideas for creating something similar

I just built a pantry (http://www.sawmillcreek.org/showthread.php?223901-Finished-the-pantry-remodel) for my wife using the Quick tray brackets that allow you to adjust the slide heights. The worked really well and they can be cut with a table saw. They come with metal clips that attach to your slides that hook into the brackets. It is a nice system.

Chris Padilla
11-20-2014, 5:19 PM
Good to hear about the Quicktray system. I picked one up from Rockler a while ago in anticipation for some bathroom cabinets. I haven't installed it yet but I glad to hear it is working out.

Kevin Jenness
11-20-2014, 6:17 PM
Check out the Century x-series adjustable bracket system at atlanticplywood.com. I believe they will work with Blum undermount slides.

Sam Murdoch
11-20-2014, 7:02 PM
Check out the Century x-series adjustable bracket system at atlanticplywood.com. I believe they will work with Blum undermount slides.

Yeah those are nice. You can buy with or without the pilasters (make your own if you prefer. Simple and direct way of making pullouts on Blum slide adjustable.
Here's a brief intro - https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=q9-jrYm-6a8

There is another version out there with metal pilasters but they might be proprietary to the cabinet company that provided the cabinets I installed.

Charles Wiggins
11-20-2014, 7:23 PM
The relevant part starts at 2:32
You wouldn't need to do the spring loaded mechanism


http://youtu.be/0qSzHGyNSk0?t=2m32s

Mel Fulks
11-21-2014, 5:45 PM
Yeah Charles, it's a good system. Seen a number of 19th century pieces with that feature, so I'm not sure he will get much
patented. Worked in a shop that had one order for something of that type, but I did not work on it. I do think the type I posted about looks and works better with books.