ear3
Member
- Joined
- Jul 24, 2014
- Messages
- 4,341
So I'm finishing up the set of base cabinets for an entertainment center I was commissioned to build, and just wanted to share the solution I cam up with for the center unit, which will house the flat screen TV lift mechanism.
The specs called for a faux double door front panel that was easily removable so that the lift mechanism/TV could be installed, but the hardware for making it removable had to be hidden and couldn't project far into the cavity where the lift would be.
I had never tried this before, but I decided to go with magnets.
Although it wasn't completely necessary (since the edge of the carcasse would be hidden by the panel), I decided to get tricky and embed one set of magnets in the hardwood edge banding on the front edge of the case. This involved doing a double line of white oak edging strips, the first one more or less the exact thickness of the magnets (around 1/8" thick), and the second basically the same size -- thin enough to allow the magnetic action to work through the wood and a bit extra to allow me to waste away a bit with the jointer plane to make the edge straight and smooth.
I drilled through holes in the first strip in which the magnets would sit -- the magnets where 12mm diameter, so I made the center point 5/16" from the inside of the case -- and then laid that strip with some glue on the edge along with the magnets:
View attachment 1
Covered it with the second strip of edging and glued it up as per normal. In total I embedded 12 of these magnets around the edge of the 47" x 30 1/2" case. Here's a side view of the open case without the panel -- the inner panel is 1/2" ply that gets screwed in and behind which are going to be all the cords and stuff:
View attachment 2
Here you can see the position of some of the magnets when I did the set-up for the panel, laying the magnets over the top of the wood so I could double check their position and orientation of their magnetic poles:
View attachment 3
The removable panel was made out of a solid white oak frame with 1/2" white oak ply inset from the back into a rabbet. I drilled the corresponding holes in the back of the panel and secured the facing set of magnets with CA glue. The holding power of the magnets was enough to prevent lateral movement, but the panel was still slipping down so I also installed some 1/4" cleats/stops at the bottom that would stop the panel from falling:
View attachment 4
Viewed from the top the cleats are thin enough such that they won't interfere with the lift mechanism:
View attachment 5
The combination of magnets and cleats makes the panel super secure once installed, but easily removable just by pulling it from the top off the edge. The panel is short of the top of the case by 7/8" since the horizontal surface/counter-top is going to have a 3/4" overhang (+ 1/8" reveal/clearance):
View attachment 6
View attachment 7
View attachment 8
View attachment 9
Problem solved.
The specs called for a faux double door front panel that was easily removable so that the lift mechanism/TV could be installed, but the hardware for making it removable had to be hidden and couldn't project far into the cavity where the lift would be.
I had never tried this before, but I decided to go with magnets.
Although it wasn't completely necessary (since the edge of the carcasse would be hidden by the panel), I decided to get tricky and embed one set of magnets in the hardwood edge banding on the front edge of the case. This involved doing a double line of white oak edging strips, the first one more or less the exact thickness of the magnets (around 1/8" thick), and the second basically the same size -- thin enough to allow the magnetic action to work through the wood and a bit extra to allow me to waste away a bit with the jointer plane to make the edge straight and smooth.
I drilled through holes in the first strip in which the magnets would sit -- the magnets where 12mm diameter, so I made the center point 5/16" from the inside of the case -- and then laid that strip with some glue on the edge along with the magnets:
View attachment 1
Covered it with the second strip of edging and glued it up as per normal. In total I embedded 12 of these magnets around the edge of the 47" x 30 1/2" case. Here's a side view of the open case without the panel -- the inner panel is 1/2" ply that gets screwed in and behind which are going to be all the cords and stuff:
View attachment 2
Here you can see the position of some of the magnets when I did the set-up for the panel, laying the magnets over the top of the wood so I could double check their position and orientation of their magnetic poles:
View attachment 3
The removable panel was made out of a solid white oak frame with 1/2" white oak ply inset from the back into a rabbet. I drilled the corresponding holes in the back of the panel and secured the facing set of magnets with CA glue. The holding power of the magnets was enough to prevent lateral movement, but the panel was still slipping down so I also installed some 1/4" cleats/stops at the bottom that would stop the panel from falling:
View attachment 4
Viewed from the top the cleats are thin enough such that they won't interfere with the lift mechanism:
View attachment 5
The combination of magnets and cleats makes the panel super secure once installed, but easily removable just by pulling it from the top off the edge. The panel is short of the top of the case by 7/8" since the horizontal surface/counter-top is going to have a 3/4" overhang (+ 1/8" reveal/clearance):
View attachment 6
View attachment 7
View attachment 8
View attachment 9
Problem solved.
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