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Replies: 25 / Views: 3,364 |
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Pillar of the Community
United States
1667 Posts |
Learn to weld and build yur own out of structural steel angle bars and steel plate. if you can find perforated steel angle blars,, you can bolt it together same like these lower strength "high strength" consumer shelves.
Say 1/8" thickness angle bars, 1/8" steel plate. if you want to go overboard, go to 1/4" thickness or higher. those rails on those shelving units are like 1/16th and good for a couple hundred pounds overall. maybe up to 300 pounds. you need to likely get into the 1/4th to 1/2 ton range.
you dont' think of it, but stuff gets heavy a little here a little there at a time.
Another thing is there should be a load limit per shelf. how much it can take before failure of evenly distributed weight. was there assembly directions or booklet of info with it?
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Valued Member
United States
318 Posts |
Yes. Coins are heavy. There is a pawn shop near my town in NJ where one of their safes has sunk into the floor. Stuck between first floor and basement. Been that way for years.
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
Quote: There is a pawn shop near my town in NJ where one of their safes has sunk into the floor. Stuck between first floor and basement. Been that way for years. 
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Pillar of the Community
 United States
3755 Posts |
"learn to weld" LOL Yes, because I can just do that over the weekend. LOL ;) No, there was nothing about the load per shelf in the instructions. Total capacity is 2 tons. I figured that SHOULD be sufficient.
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Moderator
 United States
189340 Posts |
Quote: Total capacity is 2 tons. I figured that SHOULD be sufficient. Your collection is more vast than I thought! 
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Valued Member
United States
338 Posts |
A dressed up floor pallet works pretty good as well.
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Pillar of the Community
United States
9792 Posts |
After being a victim of a burglary, I would go to the basement, and build a wall of masonry bricks and double rebar with a steel door and a serious lock for storage, just make sure everything is off the floor and there is food humidity control and a sump pump installed as well. Much cheaper than a safe just create a safe room.
Glad your coins survived Don!
"Buy the Book Before You Buy the Coin" - Aaron R. Feldman - "And read it" - Me 2013! ANA Life Member #3288 in good standing since 1981, ANS, Early American Coppers Member (EAC), Colonial Coin Collectors Club member (C4), Conder Token Collector Club member (CTCC), Civil War Token Society (CWTS) member, Liberty Seated Collectors Club (LSCC) & Numismatic Bibliomania Society member (NBS), USMex, Member in good standing, 2¢ variety collector. See my want page: http://goccf.com/t/140440
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Valued Member
United States
392 Posts |
A long diagonal Flat bar in the back or X using two bars In back. Then drill a hole and bolt each shelf to the diagonal bar. Best is a bolt near the middle of the shelf that gives some support. Looks like most of the albums are toward the back anyway. Nice collection for display.
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Bedrock of the Community
 United States
12477 Posts |
Wow, not a bad problem to have in my book.  Keep in mind that all of that weight is being transferred to the floor through the four small footprints of the shelving unit.
In Memory of Crazyb0 12-26-1951 to 7-27-2020 In Memory of Tootallious 3-31-1964 to 4-15-2020 In Memory of T-BOP 10-12-1949 to 1-19-2024
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Valued Member
United States
62 Posts |
Or switch to stamp collecting 30 + Scott specialty and National albums with catalogues may surprise a non philatelist as to the bulk involved. 
Edited by fredcdobbs 10/08/2020 10:22 pm
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Replies: 25 / Views: 3,364 |