FuzzyTiger
Well-known member
So a friend built some garage shelves recently and they were showing them off to me. And I suggested that they add some reinforcements to strengthen the structure. They mentioned that they had just been following tutorials online and everyone was building their shelving that way.
So I googled it and they're right. Pretty much every design I can find online is building them the same way.
The design I take issue with (not sure why I can't embed the image):
https://imgur.com/n8tbaMN
My immediate thought is that all the load is being carried by the fasteners on the 3 vertical 2x4's. Most likely they're screws too which are weaker to shearing forces than nails. Not that I think a nail is the right choice here.
My suggestion was to add some vertical reinforcement behind the vertical 2x4's so the frame of each shelf rests on them. Also add similar supports in the back against the wall. That way the weight is all being carried by the structure rather than the fasteners. Essentially approaching it the same way that you'd frame a wall (window/door opening specifically I suppose).
The only reason I can see for doing it the way in the design is to save having to make a few more cuts of wood and maybe a few dollars in additional lumber? But the extra time and expense are both pretty minimal and you should end up with shelves that can carry probably at least an order of magnitude more weight.
So which is it? Am I just wrong or missing something?
So I googled it and they're right. Pretty much every design I can find online is building them the same way.
The design I take issue with (not sure why I can't embed the image):
https://imgur.com/n8tbaMN
My immediate thought is that all the load is being carried by the fasteners on the 3 vertical 2x4's. Most likely they're screws too which are weaker to shearing forces than nails. Not that I think a nail is the right choice here.
My suggestion was to add some vertical reinforcement behind the vertical 2x4's so the frame of each shelf rests on them. Also add similar supports in the back against the wall. That way the weight is all being carried by the structure rather than the fasteners. Essentially approaching it the same way that you'd frame a wall (window/door opening specifically I suppose).
The only reason I can see for doing it the way in the design is to save having to make a few more cuts of wood and maybe a few dollars in additional lumber? But the extra time and expense are both pretty minimal and you should end up with shelves that can carry probably at least an order of magnitude more weight.
So which is it? Am I just wrong or missing something?
