I am making a set of floating shelves out of solid oak (offcuts bought from a member here actually).
They are only 4" deep, designed for holding picture frames only.
My plan had been to buy the floating shelf pins/brackets to fix them to the wall however drilling these perfectly could be tricky and also they are quite expensive considering I need 2 per shelf and I am making 3 shelves that are only 14" long.
I wondered if pocket holes would be a strong enough fixing to hold them to the wall? I could use 3 pocket holes per shelf, and longer screws that engage into red wall plugs.
Is this a workable idea or crazy? I am thinking it would be plenty strong enough for the weight they are holding. I have seen similar shelves from Ikea made of MFC that are just face screwed into the wall, can't be much difference if any between that a pocket hole in Oak.
They are only 4" deep, designed for holding picture frames only.
My plan had been to buy the floating shelf pins/brackets to fix them to the wall however drilling these perfectly could be tricky and also they are quite expensive considering I need 2 per shelf and I am making 3 shelves that are only 14" long.
I wondered if pocket holes would be a strong enough fixing to hold them to the wall? I could use 3 pocket holes per shelf, and longer screws that engage into red wall plugs.
Is this a workable idea or crazy? I am thinking it would be plenty strong enough for the weight they are holding. I have seen similar shelves from Ikea made of MFC that are just face screwed into the wall, can't be much difference if any between that a pocket hole in Oak.