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#1
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Anyone make a lateral file cabinet?
I have a request to make a walnut lateral file cabinet. The customer is wanting the files to go across the width of the cabinet and not front to back like most file cabinets I have seen. Anyone here make a file cabinet and recommend any plans? I am thinking make the carcase to his design and use heavy duty full extension drawer glides. It will only be one drawer tall and I want to make it so it will not tip as well.
Any ideas or guideance?
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Come on Spring! |
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#2
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I made a 2 drawer locking one for legal size papers. I used 3/4" popular for the drawers and 3/4" angle iron for the folders to slide on. I didn't have any plans. I just figured how big the draws had to be for the files and then worked out the numbers from there. If you have any specific questions, let me know. If you need measurements, I will have to get them for you when I get home.
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#3
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A lateral file with only one drawer? Yes, you'd best worry about tipping. On a two-drawer cabinet, you get to use the weight in the closed drawer to counterbalance the weight in the open drawer. On a one-drawer cabinet, you don't have that option.
Can you bolt the cabinet to the wall? Or some other piece of furniture, like a desk? Or can you build in counterbalance weight? For instance, a concrete slab at the back of the cabinet. Or lead. |
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#4
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For counterbalance materials, lead is pretty much the winner if you're tight on space. It is several times the density of concrete/stone/sand. But it is pricey -- $5/lb the last time I bought it. If you're not tight on space, concrete is good. You can cast it into slabs complete with holes for mounting bolts. An 80-lb sack will cost you $3 or so.
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#5
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WOW Cary - EXACTLY what I am looking for. If you get dimensions together I will make it worth your time.
It will be a two drawer config - my mistake.
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Come on Spring! |
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#6
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Quote:
PM me your e-mail address and I will send sketch and pictures. Last edited by Cary Falk; 10-27-2009 at 1:13 PM. |
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#7
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Spent uranium is the best counter weight pound for pound.
I recall when I was head of R&D for a labatory apparatus company a fellow used to call me oince in a while trying to sell the stuff. The first time he called I told him we didn't have an NRC license and he assured me that there was no need. We could purchase the super heavy metal and machine it and put it in end user products. I never purchased any. I didn't think that there was an upside to the material given that the sales pitch would have to get around people's feelings about the concept of spent uranium. |
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#8
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#9
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Came across this plan....
http://americanwoodworker.com/blogs/...e-Cabinet.aspx |
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#10
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What I did
Built an entire office suite, desk with 4 drawers, 2 deep (see picture). The thing mounted to the wall so no tipping issues. Made the file hangers from hard maple. Used super heavy duty over travel slides. He loves it.
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#11
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Similar but different
I built something similar for a built-in where I didn't have to contend with tipping. I used the 18" glides on the link below. Although not cheap, they are rated to over 200lbs. The actual glides are a bit different than what is pictured in the photo.
http://www.rockler.com/product.cfm?p...21460&pn=21460 |
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