Awesome! There’s one closeby that’s locally owned, doubt the owner would mind. Only question is if it would damage the cinderblock at all with chipping or whatever.
Awesome! There’s one closeby that’s locally owned, doubt the owner would mind. Only question is if it would damage the cinderblock at all with chipping or whatever.
Saving Private Ryan starring Adam Sandler.
That’s neat, wasn’t aware these existed! I’ll be sure to see if I can find one second-hand.
Don’t give rats a bad name, they be adorable pets (from what I’ve heard).
Seems it should! Thanks for pointing it out!
Perfect than! Thanks a million. I asked on another comment about stability of the other shelves being on the pins rather than directly attached, but I should be good to go once that’s sorted.
I appreciate this, thanks a bunch. Only question though is what if any risks I should consider in not having the shelves directly attached to the frame.
I don’t have kids, so no worries there for furniture tipping, though just want to know if there would be other scenarios at all where the shelve might slide out and fall from the frame. Planning on eventually getting some pet bunnies, so if there’s any risks of the shelve sliding out and/or falling over, wanna make sure I prevent that from occurring to begin with.
Thanks for this, just one question though.
The single shelve that’s already installed I see has has some wide screws in the bottom. I’m not a handyman by any means (hoping that can change), but I have put together IKEA furniture before and they seem to resemble these pieces I’m familiar with where you screw them in on the bottom to help hold the pieces connecting them to the frame in place.
With this said, would the shelf pins still be fine? Just want to ensure everything will be properly sturdy is all.
Thanks a million! This actually helps a lot, and I’ll be sure to see what I can find.
Having done that myself admittedly, some people do that due to lack of electronics recycling in their area and simply not being aware of how to properly dispose of them.
Took a while before I learned that the bottle depot few blocks from my old place did electronics recycling, and where I’m from at least, they teach you how the municipal waste system works when you’re in elementary, but I don’t think they ever touched on electronics. Do remember them touching on chemicals like cleaners and whatnot.
While it’s better than not teaching kids at all, I believe in high school a refresher should be given to students in a general mandatory home economics course so that it’s touched on again when people are closer to entering adulthood and can learn more specifics of the system that they wouldn’t have understood before.
Smartest crypto bro
Man, this is why we need more walkable cities. As great as it would be to roll something out like this in North America, the distances that would need to be covered in suburbs especially would be too much for something like this.
Thanks for this! The ebay listing is really pricey for me after currency conversion and shipping costs since I’m in Canada, but I can definitely give the Amazon listing a try!
Any ideas how I’d check for cheap? I’ve been browsing ebay listings, and I’d hate paying for parts on repeat only to find out that they didn’t match.
Do you think an electronics recycling facility might be worth paying a visit?
I’d love to, but unfortunately I don’t have the craftmanship or supplies needed for that. Any ideas how I’d find someone who would?
RIP, seems I misread what’s considered acceptable. I’ll take the downvotes and take this as a lesson moving forward.
Okay, but which one is easier for diagrams?
I’d say use the left for diagrams, and the right for reference as to how things look on the inside.