siggy_7
Full time tool collector, part time woodworker
Seems a bit of a theme at the moment, but I'm embarking on building my own kitchen. In one corner, we're planning a "pull and swing" type corner unit. Having looked around at what is commercially available, I'm not impressed (variously they seem flimsy, space inefficient and not rated to a very high load). I saw a picture of something I liked the look of a lot more which doesn't appear to be commercially available in the UK, so I've decided I'm going to have a crack at making one. Something like this - basically a two-tier wooden shelf unit that slides out of the base unit and then pivots through 90° on some hinges. Then I'll make a couple of drawers to fit in the recessed corner that can pull out to the space vacated by the pull-out unit.
This brings about the question of what hardware do I use for the sliding aspects. Most of these types of units I have seen use either:
1) A highly specialised mechanism, or
2) Something that looks an awful lot like a drawer slide
I don't want to go to the trouble of fabricating some overly elaborate mechanism, so the first one is out for me. I think that most drawer slides would not cope at all well with a high moment (it's not what they are designed for after all), and additionally the drawer slide would then have to pivot with the unit which takes up a large amount of space on the commercial units that use this type of slider.
What I'm after is a sliding mechanism that doesn't extend, but rather has the sliding element moving between two ends of a fixed length track. I thought about CNC slides, and currently I'm thinking of using these:
https://www.igus.co.uk/drylin/linear-guide
I'm sure that they will work well and be plenty strong enough, but being engineered for precision machine applications they aren't cheap (I reckon about £200 all-in). For a kitchen cabinet, what I need is a decent load capacity with a nice-feeling mechanism. Can someone point me in the direction of something more suitable, or is this application so niche that I've already identified my best option?
This brings about the question of what hardware do I use for the sliding aspects. Most of these types of units I have seen use either:
1) A highly specialised mechanism, or
2) Something that looks an awful lot like a drawer slide
I don't want to go to the trouble of fabricating some overly elaborate mechanism, so the first one is out for me. I think that most drawer slides would not cope at all well with a high moment (it's not what they are designed for after all), and additionally the drawer slide would then have to pivot with the unit which takes up a large amount of space on the commercial units that use this type of slider.
What I'm after is a sliding mechanism that doesn't extend, but rather has the sliding element moving between two ends of a fixed length track. I thought about CNC slides, and currently I'm thinking of using these:
https://www.igus.co.uk/drylin/linear-guide
I'm sure that they will work well and be plenty strong enough, but being engineered for precision machine applications they aren't cheap (I reckon about £200 all-in). For a kitchen cabinet, what I need is a decent load capacity with a nice-feeling mechanism. Can someone point me in the direction of something more suitable, or is this application so niche that I've already identified my best option?