View allAll Photos Tagged racking
I made a rack for my Raspberry Pis. It can hold up to 4 in it's current design.
Currently it holds two, a Pi B+ and a Pi2 B.
Materials used, mostly bought at Lowes.
3 pieces of 10x8 plexiglass cut to 5x7 size.
4 6" #8 thread rods.
8 (2 packages) of #8 rounded caps.
3 packages of #8 nuts
6" Micro USB cables from Amazon (will need longer for the other two Pis when added).
Cat 5 Cable cut and crimped as needed
1 Netgear Switch I had already
1 Choetech 40W Smart power from Amazon. I got this one because it also had standard plugs for the switch and a monitor if needed.
The smaller screws holding the Pis in are 4mm i believe, and it took two packages of them (16 screws and 32 nuts).
Finished up the racks for Ron's light tourer today. Moves things into the time to start thinking about paint colors category.
A rare rack of lamb cooked to tender perfection after being gently marinated in garlic and freshly picked rosemary from the local park.
Right view of racked NL-Series nodes: scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm
Simple fixture for positioning the deck of a front rack, while fitting and brazing the mounting elements. Adjustable height (pinch bolts on far side) indexes off of the front axle. Works with any HT angle. Top platform rotates 90 degrees to allow other supports to be clamped on for wider racks.
Left view of racked X-Series nodes: scale-out NAS hardware product. Photo taken May 2013. More information: www.emc.com/storage/isilon/platform-nodes-accelerators.htm
The rack we use for the Bladecenters, we have a switch in the top, that is basicly our management network for the bladecenters. The blue cables go directly to our distribution switches for the production lan, 4 trunked 1gb links per Bladecenter, spread over 2 switches per bladecenter
Rack Room Shoes (7,966 square feet)
1700 North Croatan Highway, Dare Centre, Kill Devil Hills, NC
This was originally part of a Food Lion, which opened in 1989 and relocated here on July 1st, 1998.
The rack I bought to carry my bags turned out to be a disaster. It is impossible to prevent it from pivoting around the seatpost and it does not guard the bags from rubbing the wheel. Additional struts provide a solution.
I could have bought a proper rack with its own struts, but the bags attached to a standard rack hang too low and I hit them with my heels while pedaling. So my home-made struts provide a solution to that as well.
Source: 150127_021417.ORF
The rack is fixed to the head tube so that it carries weight without wanting to "dive" as the bike turns. The rack is detachable from the head tube to make the bike easier to ship.
After years of having all my stuff on cheap tables and stacked, I finally bit the bullet and upgraded to a Sanus Systems dedicated audio rack. I like that my system now looks more badass than it actually is.