Dan Pfeiffer
Member
- Joined
- Mar 25, 2009
- Messages
- 26
Here is yet another DIY Sysport. I considered using the SYS-AZ drawers but at $40 ea they are still quite pricey to me. The carcass is 3/4" ply. I made drawers using ball bearing slides with 1" over-travel (that's important). The drawers bottoms are masonite on aluminum angle that's fastened to the slides. There is a wood strips at each end to tie it together and hold the sytainer in place. Pretty simple and only adds about 1/4" to height of systainer. I tightened up the clearances to save some space and loaded the systainers sideways. Case is about 1" taller and 1-1/4" deeper than sysport, width is 16" less than 3 sysports together. I can fit one more SYS-1 than the sysport.
I mounted the DIY Sysport on a wire cart/shelf from Costco. Loading the systainers sideways meant I could get three columns rather than two in the space on the shelf. It also meant less wasted space since less slide travel was needed to get clearance to open the top. There is lots of additional room on the cart for supplies and things that don't fit in systainers (like the parallel guides). I can hang hoses and guide rails on the ends. The wire cart can hold about 800 lbs.
Here is the cost breakdown:
(16) drawer slide pairs = $ 95
(1) 4x8'ply, 3/4" = $ 45
(2) 4x8 masonite sheets = $ 20
(6) AL angle, #6 screws = $ 70
----------------------------------
Materials Total = $230
wire shelf/cart = +$90
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Total with cart = $320
(3) Festool Sysports =$1,950
Parts for drawers works out to about $11/ea including the slides. I actually made the carcass from remnants and had the masonite already so the only stuff I bought for this project was the slides and hardware so I spent about $150. I got the aluminum angle at Home Depot for 9.96/ea for 8 foot stock. McMaster has it for 6.21 but shipping about doubles that. Online metals has it for 8.88 and shipping again makes it more than at Home Depot. I dadoed and glued the carcass with epoxy. It is very stiff without a back but I will add one from masonite to help with dust.
The slides are 70 lb capacity for a pair. The seem more than adequate to the task. For a little more I could get 100 lb slide but they are taller and I don't see the need. Might be a little stiffer but that's not a problem.
I will add some labels on the ends so I know what's where.
Dan Pfeiffer
I mounted the DIY Sysport on a wire cart/shelf from Costco. Loading the systainers sideways meant I could get three columns rather than two in the space on the shelf. It also meant less wasted space since less slide travel was needed to get clearance to open the top. There is lots of additional room on the cart for supplies and things that don't fit in systainers (like the parallel guides). I can hang hoses and guide rails on the ends. The wire cart can hold about 800 lbs.
Here is the cost breakdown:
(16) drawer slide pairs = $ 95
(1) 4x8'ply, 3/4" = $ 45
(2) 4x8 masonite sheets = $ 20
(6) AL angle, #6 screws = $ 70
----------------------------------
Materials Total = $230
wire shelf/cart = +$90
-------------------------------
Total with cart = $320
(3) Festool Sysports =$1,950
Parts for drawers works out to about $11/ea including the slides. I actually made the carcass from remnants and had the masonite already so the only stuff I bought for this project was the slides and hardware so I spent about $150. I got the aluminum angle at Home Depot for 9.96/ea for 8 foot stock. McMaster has it for 6.21 but shipping about doubles that. Online metals has it for 8.88 and shipping again makes it more than at Home Depot. I dadoed and glued the carcass with epoxy. It is very stiff without a back but I will add one from masonite to help with dust.
The slides are 70 lb capacity for a pair. The seem more than adequate to the task. For a little more I could get 100 lb slide but they are taller and I don't see the need. Might be a little stiffer but that's not a problem.
I will add some labels on the ends so I know what's where.
Dan Pfeiffer