
frederic
New member
As always, I like making things out of steel. I've also discovered that toslink for adat-compatible equipment doesn't like long distances. So, I'll kill two birds with one stone - 22U of rackspace, in two 11U columns, underneath my recently constructed console table.
First of three "legs":
Second "leg", making sure its flat:
Test-fitting 11U rack rail (Mid Atlantic Products, 12U with 1U lopped off):
Crosspiece welded onto one "Leg":
All three "legs" welded to one crosspiece (of two):
Final 22U rack, sitting under console table, begging for gear to be loaded:
Yes, this looks an awful lot like a desktop rack... however its made out of 1/8" thickness steel, some pieces 2" wide. This means instead of a $45 flimsy unit that music stores sell mostly for lightweight outboards, synths, etc, I can pack in some really heavy stuff. Like four Akai DR16 recorders at 90lbs each, and still have some space for 6U worth of lighter, smaller things.

First of three "legs":
Second "leg", making sure its flat:
Test-fitting 11U rack rail (Mid Atlantic Products, 12U with 1U lopped off):
Crosspiece welded onto one "Leg":
All three "legs" welded to one crosspiece (of two):
Final 22U rack, sitting under console table, begging for gear to be loaded:
Yes, this looks an awful lot like a desktop rack... however its made out of 1/8" thickness steel, some pieces 2" wide. This means instead of a $45 flimsy unit that music stores sell mostly for lightweight outboards, synths, etc, I can pack in some really heavy stuff. Like four Akai DR16 recorders at 90lbs each, and still have some space for 6U worth of lighter, smaller things.
