PennineRider
Member
Hello all,
As my first ever woodworking project, I want to build a simple wall-mounted rack for our spice jars, out of some 15mm pallet wood I have knocking round the garage.
It's a simple skeleton design: Four horizontals, two verticals.
Building the rack will be simple I think, but mounting it on the wall less so. My ideal mounting solution would be four keyhole brackets, inlaid flush into the verticals of the rack, then mounted on screws in the (brick) kitchen wall, for an invisible, "flush" mounting.
My questions:
1. The width of the keyhole brackets is 12mm, and they're the smallest I can find. The width of my wood is 15mm. If I try to chisel out my wood to mount them flush, there will be 1.5mm each side. Will I succeed or is this too fine a tolerance, and will I just make a mess?
2. Will four of these, slotted into plugs/screws on a brick wall, take the weight of my rack + 36 spice jars?
3. If my solution isn't going to work, then am I doomed to L brackets?
Thanks in advance
As my first ever woodworking project, I want to build a simple wall-mounted rack for our spice jars, out of some 15mm pallet wood I have knocking round the garage.
It's a simple skeleton design: Four horizontals, two verticals.
Building the rack will be simple I think, but mounting it on the wall less so. My ideal mounting solution would be four keyhole brackets, inlaid flush into the verticals of the rack, then mounted on screws in the (brick) kitchen wall, for an invisible, "flush" mounting.
My questions:
1. The width of the keyhole brackets is 12mm, and they're the smallest I can find. The width of my wood is 15mm. If I try to chisel out my wood to mount them flush, there will be 1.5mm each side. Will I succeed or is this too fine a tolerance, and will I just make a mess?
2. Will four of these, slotted into plugs/screws on a brick wall, take the weight of my rack + 36 spice jars?
3. If my solution isn't going to work, then am I doomed to L brackets?
Thanks in advance