Once again we will use an ice cream motor. (gotta love 'em). If you are going to have a big book shelf like mine you need to use a metal rod because Take a piece of paper and draw a egg shape with the max reach of 4-4.5 inches from a center point for your cams. Now take the stencil, cut it out and draw the shape on one of your pieces of wood you are going to use as as your cams. I had nine cams and if I were you I might do five, nine was just too many going at once. Cut out your cams with a scroll saw and drill a hole the ends so it slips over the rod, stagger the cams and glue into place with liquid nails. Make sure the cams are randomly staggered. You can brace them into position with left over chunks of wood. Step 2: Pretty explanatory. The rest you can probably figure out from my pictures. In the picture below you can see little dashes on the back of the shelf, those are the eye hooks that the elastic runs through. They should be staggered between the cams and should be all equal in height. Then you go to your books, take a quarter inch drill bit, measure up from the bottom 2.5 in or whatever height you hooks are at, and up to the other one. Drill through, cut off the excess, and do for all the books that will move. Next take the elastic, tie it to the leftmost eye hook, run it through your book and back to the next eye hook, do the same with the other string. The string should be pulled fairly tight, but not too much, just enough to pull the book back. Once you have all of your books lined up over their respective cams, tie off the other end of the elastic to an eye hook and fill in with other books. Before that you my want to soap edges and stuff, that seemed to help a bit. run a staple in front of that books that don't move so they don't start walking away. Hopefully it should work! :) Good Luck! and have fun!
| ||||||||||||||||
© 1999 - 2004 Cory Derenburger
All Rights Reserved.
We are not responible for any injury and/or damage due to use of content on this site.