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www.1001pallets.com/2016/04/coat-rack-peg-rail-one-plank-...
Choose wisely, look through your selection of pallets and see if you can find a fairly decent plank in among them. I aim for about 5 inches wide and one inch thick with a minimum length of 24 inches. They're usually pine but you may drop lucky and have access to hard woods.
Prepare the timber, remove the nails and start sanding, I don't recommend using an electric planer unless you're really certain that you've got every piece of nail out of them. Even the dirt will dull blades and i advise against it. I'm a big belt sander user, start off with a 40 to remove the bulk of the rough and dirt and then move onto a 80 grit belt finishing off with a 120 sometimes or going to your pad sander so that you can also give the edges a rounding. How much you sand the timber is entirely down to you. I'm not a fan of the circular saw or band saw marks that are left after milling so i take these right out and down to the natural timber. You can take some of the sawdust and mix it with PVA glue to make a passable filler for the nail holes.
Find the center of the board and and draw a faint line horizontally along it. At each end and at about a 2 inches in drill a small pilot hole followed be a larger slightly recessed hole. These will be the holes for attaching the peg rail to the wall. For the coat pegs will require a bit of maths in determining the gaps between each peg depending on how wide you make your board and how many pegs your going to need. I usually put about 6 inches between my pegs.
Once you've got your holes marked its time to fit your pegs, i use wooden shaker pegs available from ebay. The shank is 10mm and that's what I use in the pillar drill, a pillar drill gives you accuracy and control that a hand held drill doesn't. Think about getting one cheap from the local buy sell groups. Drill your holes and give them a quick sand around the edge to remove any tearing if there is any. Put a smear of glue around the shank of the peg and push as far as you can into the hole, finish it off with a couple of taps from a wooden mallet.
You're basically done, just wait for it to dry. How you finish it is now down to you. Briwax is always a good choice, linseed oil, paint, there are many options available. My choice is Lichtenberg figure done with a microwave transformer.
the top mounting point for the rear rack is at the seat stay bridge. there is a threaded stud at the end of the strut, with a recessed nut (from a brake) on the other side. very clean.
nice rack? or nice back rack? Hell i love the idea my self ! think about it lady's! could save you time while your doing your other house hold chores! two birds one stone kinda saying! hahahaahah I took this going down the highway,I honestly thought the girl was riding on there backwards! I mean i new it wasnt a butt crack to high up...I know im goin to hell for that-but it was a funny moment to share.
John Moore, Colton White, and Frank Vatrano rack their hockey sticks at Great Park Ice Rink.
PXL_20230316_025600427
Progress on the front rack. Needing a few braze-ons and some finish work yet, but it's mostly done. This one is getting nickel plating. www.bantambicycles.com
Nordstrom Rack (32,500 square feet)
4588 Virginia Beach Boulevard, Pembroke Mall, Virginia Beach, VA
This location opened on March 10th, 2016; it was originally part of a Sears, which opened on July 27th, 1966 and downsized in 2015.
An older rack, but I'm building a rack for someone & they want to see a perspective view of my version of this kind of rack.
Bike Rack.
Taken January 26, 2024. St. Louis, Missouri.
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Model : Rack Framboise
Make-up : Aurore Rheuter
Location : La Maison de Maître, Brussels, BE
Photographer : Jerome B.
Lighting assisant / co-photog : Normann Szkop
This past week I was out of town working in another county office on the west side of the state. Instead of commuting 1.5hrs+ each way every day, they had us stay at a local hotel. This was a wine rack on the wall in the hotel.
I thought it was an interesting piece of art. Unfortunately the days were long and the work was mentally draining. Even though I had my camera on me constantly, I took virtually no pictures. This was one I took the last trip a couple weeks ago, but was the same place I stayed this past week. I don't know if they'll send me back again or not, but hopefully if they do it's not until January. We'll see......
Basket/rack combo (rasket?) for the small bike I'm working on. Everything is tacked together. Needs finish brazing and a few little doodads before its completed.