22

Apr

Durability Of Steel Shelving

In all environments that need storage shelving systems, the buyer of the shelving system need to take into consideration; the suitability of the shelving unit for his or her particular needs, how long it will last and how versatile the system is.

Typically there are several solutions to this problem. For example, low profile shelving systems will help the buyer who needs to make the best use of vertical storage space and will need to access his or her stored items quickly and efficiently. Usually the shelves in one of these systems will have a load bearing capacity of up to 800 lb. This capacity will depend upon the steel gauge and the size of the shelf selected. There may be widths of up to 48 inches available.

Wide profile shelving systems will be ideal for longer spans. The shelving may be made of chipboard or steel wire mesh. These units are capable of coping with very demanding storage needs. Load capacities, again depend on the size of the shelf and are up to 2500 lb. The shelf widths available are up to 96 inches.

For businesses, especially small retailers, that may have a tight budget to stick to, there are also available, channel beam shelving systems that include a special v-beam design that will give heavy duty support for shelves. These systems will be useful for a good many storage solutions in stock rooms and warehouses without breaking the buyer’s budget. The warehouse or shopkeeper can also use them in conjunction with storage boxes.

19

Apr

Garage Ceiling Storage

The one place in the garage that is probably disregarded more often than any others as a storage space is the ceiling. For example, it is the perfect place to store bicycles while they’re not being used. Seasonal items such as skis, snowboards, tents and camping equipment could be placed in this storage space. If you have a storage box for the car-roof that is only ever used on holidays then the garage ceiling might prove to be an ideal storage place for it. The Christmas tree, lights and decorations would be another ideal collection of seasonal things to be stored here as well. Ladders are another item that could also be easily stored under the ceiling.

Manual hoists with load bearing capacities from 45 lb to 250 lb are available with both single and double pulley systems although typically only the lighter load bearing hoists would employ a single pulley system. You could also use a hoist to secure a purpose built rack that can be lifted and lowered to store your smaller items. Electric hoists are also available and are typically very easy to install and use.

For a more permanent solution, several sizes of platforms are usually available that are lightweight and constructed from steel and steel mesh to make them strong and durable. It is possible to use them to store plastic storage boxes that will hold a variety of small and large items such as children’s toys, document boxes and files and other odds and ends.

16

Apr

Wall Mounted Shelving System

In 1978 a company patented a shelving system that was both adjustable and wall-mounted. It consisted of a vertical slotted wall mounted support and shelf support brackets which slipped onto the bar. The support brackets varied in length to hold different depth shelves. The system is easy to mount and has an extremely versatile design in that in can be made use of either as a single shelf or from floor to ceiling.

The original was clever, but it did have some problems. The bars are of an unattractive appearance and the combination of these bars has an unfinished look.  As a result of these drawbacks, the systems are mostly used as cheap, utilitarian shelving systems, in for example, garages, garden sheds and other places where appearances are not important.

Another, more important problem was shelf instability. It is possible to displace shelves from brackets and brackets from the bar if accidently knocked from underneath. Situating too much weight on one side of the shelf could cause it to tip over. The brackets themselves could twist around as well if hit.

Another company set out to design a system to solve all of these difficulties, but still be inexpensive and easy to assemble. Another benefit of the new system is that it has an attractive appearance and could be used anywhere in the home.

The new system has a heavy duty steel insert which is similar to the original design but the inserts are cased in plastic and this has solved the twisting problem.

13

Apr

Benefits Of Plastic Storage Boxes

Plastic storage boxes can be put to use in a wide range of areas. Since they are strong, durable and waterproof, they can withstand a great deal of abuse when being used to pack away small items during a house move, for example. In the home itself, plastic storage boxes are useful, depending on their size, for the storing of anything from books, paper or documents to food both in the fridge and the freezer.

The material, plastic, is remarkably versatile and is used in the manufacture of thousands of products, toys, medical equipment and even clothes, for example. In the 1970s, items made out of plastic were thought of as being “cheap and nasty”  – the way this attitude has changed as the age of Information Technology has come upon us with PDAs, mobile phones, personal and laptop computers, is truly amazing.

Before the first synthetic plastic was developed, naturally occurring substances such as gutta-percha, derived from the sap of certain trees, shellac, produced from the secretions of a tiny scale insect were used as plastic material. The horns of animals could also be used, but would need to be softened by being boiled in water.

The first synthetic plastic was developed by an American inventor, John Hyatt, in 1869. He found that the plant material cellulose when plasticised with the addition of camphor could be used as a cheap substitute for ivory. The material became known as celluloid and for 30 years was the only plastic of any importance for commercial uses. As a storage solution, plastic boxes are affordable, very practical and can look great too.

09

Apr

Furniture Can Be Fun As Well As Practical

Those who have work benches or work tables might want to consider building items of furniture for their children’s bedrooms that are unusual, fun and practical as well.

Bunk beds in the shape of a camper van for example. The design will take up more room than a conventional set of bunk beds. However, although the finished unit will be about 18 inches longer than usual, it will have a large tray on the top deck which will hold a light, a selection of books and soft toys. The bottom deck will hold a writing desk and chair where homework could be done as well as any other tasks; artwork for example, with the budding master artist not making as much mess on the bedroom carpet. Shelves can be fixed to the wall under the bed too for extra storage.

If you want to screw the camper to the wall, it is recommended that you take about ten minutes to decide which way around the camper van should face. You need to make sure that plenty of natural light falls on the surface of the desk. When you have worked this out, it will then be possible to decide in which side to fit the door in order for it to face out into the room.

A fun alternative idea for an only child’s bedroom would be a double decker bus shaped bed. In this case, the bed would go on the top deck. On the bottom deck would be a desk in the driver’s cab and behind that room for toys, school equipment and so forth. Storage solutions for the home which are stylish and practical.

06

Apr

Storage Units For The Workplace

In the workplace, storage is always a problem. Managers need to balance the documents and paperwork to be placed in archive and items that will they will want to be available for day to day use. They should also take into consideration the amount of space taken up by any storage system.

One storage system that may be ideally suited for this purpose consists of a frame with the potential to store as many or as few items as necessary. The frame fits against a wall and once secured will provide a sturdy and yet lightweight basis for the storage.

Several storage units are typically available to be attached to this particular frame. An open storage unit, for example, usually has plenty of room for the storage and organisation of files, documents, envelopes, items of stationery and so forth.

If they are stacked vertically, a lid is only needed for the top unit. Sometimes there is an open storage unit with a fixed centre shelf. This provides more flexibility and better storage for small items.

For the storage of larger items, work wear, tools or reams of photocopy or pc printer paper; there are bulk storage units. Lightweight but strong, these usually have adjustable shelves which may stored flat when not being used.

Wire baskets, made from heavy duty steel mesh are ideal for the storage of items that may need to be easily seen. Bottles, mail and work clothing are some of the things perfect for this sort of storage unit.

02

Apr

CDs, DVDs And Their Storage

Many people now store their video and music collections on disks, either DVD or CD. Some will have downloaded them from the Internet, legally of course, and burnt them to disc so they have a hard copy in case their computer breaks, but now have the problem of storage. If you are an avid collector; your selection of music and video soon begins to take over the room unless you find an effective and space-saving method of storage for them.

Carousel storage racks that have a relatively small footprint with optimal storage of disks are always popular. Racks that fit against the wall on top of your computer desk are also a good way of keeping your collection of downloaded music or video organised and tidy. Sometimes, if you have bought your recordable DVDs in a spindle and stored the recorded videos in a canvas container, the empty spindle can be reused to store your computer media. If you have, for example, a sheet of plastic that would otherwise be thrown out, you could make separators out of it, to keep the disks from being scratched so easily.

As far as video is concerned, a DVD recorder with an installed hard drive will store quite a few hours of films and shows. Although it is a good way of storing the media, these devices can be quite expensive. The more storage time on the hard disk then the more costly it will be. Music can be stored on the PC’s hard drive but has the disadvantage that it takes up room and begins to slow your computer down. It is also useful to have a backup in case your computer malfunctions and all the data is lost so having adequate CD & DVD storage is a must.

30

Mar

Data storage in the olden days

You may smile at the films from the 1950s featuring the ultimate in electronic sophistication, computers that filled a room and wouldn’t hold enough data to even worry the desktop or laptop computers these days.

However that smile might slip a little when you are told that the punch card method of holding data dates back to the 19th century. Charles Babbage, an English mathematician started designing a machine called the Analytical Engine. He experimented with different designs up until his death in 1871. He realised that the design could be programmed with the use of punch cards. The engine used loops of the cards to control a mechanical calculator. The calculator formulated results based on the results on the results of preceding calculations.

One of the early massive uses of punch cards as file storage devices took place in the American Census of 1900. After the census data was gathered, the facts recorded were transferred to cards, one card per person. The holes would be punched in the cards according to the possible answers to questions asked on the forms. Each card had 240 different places that any one hole may be punched.

Then the cards were counted using an electrical counting machine invented by Herman Hollerith. The machine is set up so that needles passing through the holes on each card make an electrical connection to operate clock faced dials showing numbers corresponding to each datum or combination of data. A truly innovative method of file storage that happened before the 20th century began.

28

Mar

Caring for your tools

Take care of your tools and they will take care of you. This might sound a bit old fashioned but sometimes the old fashioned ideas are the best ones. If you did woodwork or metalwork at school, this notion will have been repeated over and again by your class teacher.

In these days of mass-production of just about everything, cheap tools are all around us. Take for example wood-saws, formerly with a wooden handle and blade made of steel that needed regular sharpening. Nowadays, blades are made from alloys that last much longer and with mass-produced and therefore cheaper to produce, handles which are usually made from plastic, are low in price and for all intents and purposes, disposable.

Not matter what their cost, not looking after your tools properly is potentially dangerous and could cause damage to a project that will mean needing to replace the piece of wood or starting again.  Whether it is a project involving the building of shelving units, shelf racks or storage racking. Poorly cared for tools can cause accidents. For instance, a blunt chisel will need more effort to make it cut and this extra effort might cause it to slip. A blunt drill bit may snap if too much pressure is applied.

An oilstone to keep your chisel blades sharp is an investment worth considering. If their blades have become wet, dry them thoroughly first, leave them somewhere warm first to make sure they dry properly then spray them with oil afterwards.

26

Mar

Stair trap

With a stair landing that is reasonably easy to modify you might consider creating extra storage space. Assuming there is an unused “dead space” you have the opportunity to install a stair trap which will allow you to create an area roughly three by four feet deep into which shelf racks could be installed. If the shelf racks are self-assembly they can be adjusted to suit your needs.

To begin, remove the floor and sub-floor from the landing. Be careful about pipes or electrical wiring possibly running alongside the floor joists. Remove the top two treads and stair risers.

Nail the ledgers to the floor joists on either side of the opening, allowing room for the thickness of the door framing. Cut the subfloor plywood to size and fasten the side frame pieces to the lower edges of the panel. Attach the frame pieces to the panel at each end.

Cut the stringer pieces to size, attach them to the lower front edge of the subfloor panel. Fasten the remaining frame member across the bottom of the subfloor at the point where the stringers end. Cut risers and treads to size, cut the grip and attach it to the face of the front riser. Install the finish flooring in place atop the subfloor.

Place the assembled unit in position. Fasten strap hinges to wall and flooring.
Open the door; fasten the angle bracket to the door frame. Attach the gas struts and establish where to attach the remaining set of support brackets. Finish the floor material to match the existing floor.