ScottsGT
Well-known member
Month or so back I asked about building a sliding wall in front of a shelf I have in my garage. I want a place to hang my yard tools so I don't have to shuffle them all around when I need something off the shelf.
This Saturday I took this project on and got the wall up and in place and learned a few things along the way I'll share.
First was mounting the Unistrut. The bearing trolleys leave no room inside the Unistrut for the bolt heads. So I could only use a Lag Bolt on each end. I located the center of my ceiling joist and drove the first on end and used it as an anchor to tie the Unistrut in place while I bolted the other end in place.
I now have to notch my cabinet doors at the tip tops to clear the rail.
On the base of the sliding wall I built it with 4 casters from Harbor Freight.
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I placed a 2X4 across the top for two reasons. One, keep the ply board from bowing. second, I needed to space it out so it would clear my work bench.
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Here it is in the closed position where it will be 99% of the time.
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Open...
I've still got to paint it all and build out all the holders and brackets for my yard tools. I'll follow up later with that.
One important factor I did not take into account. There is ZERO play in the rollers from Unistrut. If your floor drops any at all, the casters will come off the ground or the wall will bind if you measure from a low point. Mine came off the ground when closed (to the right, in front of the shelf) I simply used a longer Lag bold and some thick washers between the Unistrut and the ceiling. It gets a little tight on the far left, but I never will need to open it that far.
Another option would be to slot the wood at the top and use aircraft nuts that hold their place and allow the trolleys to float. The top is only used as a guide to hold the wall up and in place. I built it with the weight designed to be on the bottom casters.
And yes, my work area is a disaster since it is a working garage and not some pretty showplace!
This Saturday I took this project on and got the wall up and in place and learned a few things along the way I'll share.
First was mounting the Unistrut. The bearing trolleys leave no room inside the Unistrut for the bolt heads. So I could only use a Lag Bolt on each end. I located the center of my ceiling joist and drove the first on end and used it as an anchor to tie the Unistrut in place while I bolted the other end in place.
I now have to notch my cabinet doors at the tip tops to clear the rail.
On the base of the sliding wall I built it with 4 casters from Harbor Freight.
I placed a 2X4 across the top for two reasons. One, keep the ply board from bowing. second, I needed to space it out so it would clear my work bench.
Here it is in the closed position where it will be 99% of the time.
Open...
I've still got to paint it all and build out all the holders and brackets for my yard tools. I'll follow up later with that.
One important factor I did not take into account. There is ZERO play in the rollers from Unistrut. If your floor drops any at all, the casters will come off the ground or the wall will bind if you measure from a low point. Mine came off the ground when closed (to the right, in front of the shelf) I simply used a longer Lag bold and some thick washers between the Unistrut and the ceiling. It gets a little tight on the far left, but I never will need to open it that far.
Another option would be to slot the wood at the top and use aircraft nuts that hold their place and allow the trolleys to float. The top is only used as a guide to hold the wall up and in place. I built it with the weight designed to be on the bottom casters.
And yes, my work area is a disaster since it is a working garage and not some pretty showplace!
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