Table of Contents

~~REVEAL~~

Component Boxes

Fits into a milkcrate for transportation.

Milkcrates fit into Milkcrate Shelving.

Quarter Width/Quarter Height - Laser-Cut

This is a single chest and draw, design to fit 16 in a milkcrate.

Build Instructions

These instructions cover using the files provided to;

In-House

Materials

Tools and Equipment

Instructions

Preparation

At The Edge

Custom

The 3D model can be viewed, interacted with and downloaded from here https://a360.co/2D4gpg7. You will need to provide an email to recieve the download.

To customise the material thickness, dimensions and tolerances you can change the parameters of the original design in Fusion360..

The design has two main components - the chest;

and the draw.

The dimensions are based on the external of the chest. This is to ensure that the chest and draw fit inside our container.

Changing Parameters

Before playing with the parameters remember;

Open the model, then go to the parameters menu.

The parameters you will can change are favourites at the the top of the list.

External

Quarter Width/Quarter Height Files

The individual faces as DXFs are:

Layout for cutting - sheet dimension minimum 560mm x 320mm.

Rayjet Settings are:

Export for other formats:

chest_draw_quarter_width_quarter_height_1_.dxf

Quarter Width/Quarter Height - CNC - Knife

As above - but without tabs.

The Fusion360 file and 3D model is viewable here https://a360.co/2CGh3iY

The individual faces as DXFs are:

Layout for cutting - sheet dimension minimum 535mm x 310mm - sheet (page) size 2200 x 1200.

Full Width/Quarter Height - Laser-Cut

The Fusion360 file and 3D model is viewable here https://a360.co/2DaWUG2.

The individual faces as DXFs are:

Layout for cutting. Two sheets each a full sheet dimension 726mm x 432mm for Rayjet.

Rayjet Settings are:

Export for other formats:

Half Width/Half Height - Laser-Cut

The individual faces as DXFs are:

Layout for cutting. Three sheets each a full sheet dimension 726mm x 432mm for Rayjet.

Page Credits

Created by Andrei Maberley on 2018/01/08 14:09.

contributors

1)
cardboard is free for limited personal and prototyping use