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heavy duty shelf pins

10/16/17       
DS

Every once in a while we have a cabinet with extremely long adjustable shelves. Although we can build the shelves to handle the span, the potential weight placed on these shelves could easily compromise the pins. Not the pins themselves, but the wood surrounding the pins. It'll simply crush under the weight, the pins will sag and the shelf tumbles.

Alternatives are metal grommets in the holes and/or larger diameter shelf pins. KV tracks are not an option. Does anyone else have a better solution?

10/16/17       #2: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Alan F. Member

There are a variety of pins that have metal that locks the shelf


View larger image

Hafele Shelf support

10/16/17       #3: heavy duty shelf pins ...
DS

Alan,

Thanks for the response. I have used that one before, I've also used the ugly plastic earthquake type with double pins. but in this case the shelf is 1-1/4" thick and set at a 15 degree angle, so I can only use a single pin/non-locking style. The best I can find is a 7mm pin and grommet from Hafele. Was hoping for something even more robust than that. I guess the ideal solution would be a shelf pin that spans two holes but with a single support and without any locking mechanism.

10/16/17       #4: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Bruce H

so put in an extra set of holes, three pins instead of two.

10/16/17       #5: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Mark

I like the idea of the third row, just be sure to get the boring right so the shelves don't rock or
The Brusso shelf pins, while pricey, are the best I've used, rock solid
http://www.brusso.com/k-10/?utm_medium=googleshopping&utm_source=bc&_vsref
dom=adwords&gclid=Cj0KCQjwsZHPBRClARIsA

10/16/17       #6: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Alan F. Member

This spans two holes, maybe and edge on the back would keep it from slipping, otherwise rafix or similar.


View larger image

http://www.brusso.com/k-10/?utm_medium=googleshopping&utm_source=bc&_vsref

10/16/17       #7: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Alan F. Member

use this link

correct link

10/17/17       #8: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Richard

I have used the 5mm magic wire supports that Alan mentions and they certainly work well with large shelves.
I haven't tried this but wondered about drilling a deeper 11/16" shelf pin hole and using steel dowels such as these.

https://www.amazon.com/Sutemribor-Stainless-Support-Fasten-Elements/dp/B
075GQW5KG/ref=sr_1_13?s=industrial&ie=UTF8&qid=1508253746&sr=1-13&
;refinements=p_n_feature_eleven_browse-bin%3A3622111011

10/18/17       #9: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Kevin Jenness

The problem I have seen with heavily loaded shelves on pins is essentially "camout", where the pin rolls out of its hole, crushing material as the shelf drops. I don't care for the look, but l-shaped pins combined with closely fit shelves have fixed the issue for me.

10/20/17       #10: heavy duty shelf pins ...
Kevin Jenness

Sorry, that should be (capital) "L shaped pins".

3/30/19       #11: heavy duty shelf pins ...
frank Member

why not fixed (dado) shelves in the upper?

i'm seeing a lot of floating shelves..giving me the idea.

how many of you have adjusted shelves once they were positioned on the initial install?


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