Woodworker's Journal 2009-33-4, страница 46

Woodworker

Jigs & Fixtures

Sandpaper Organizer

By Chris Marshall

Sandpaper Organizer

(Front View)

Chalk il up to laziness, but I used to keep my hodgepodge of sandpapers in an old Girl Scout Cookies1 carton. When I finally got tired of scrounging through that jumbled mess, I designed this all-in-one organizer. It has pegs on the sides to hang six different grits of 5" sanding disks and 3x21 belts. Seven pull-out trays work well for stacking flat sheets. There's room on top for storing two or three sanders and a cubby down

MATERIAL LIST

1 Sides (2)

T xW x L

3/4" x 12" x 20"

6 Divider (1)

T xW x L

3/4" x 3" x 11 '/<"

2 Disc Pegs (6)

5/16" Dia. x 2W

7 Trays (7)

1/4" x 11V" x 14'/2"

3 Belt Pegs (3)

1/2" Dia. x 33A"

8 Tray Pulls (7)

3/4" x 3/4" x 2'A"

4 Top, Bottom (2)

3/4" x 11'/»" x 14'//

9 Hacksaw Blade (1)

10" Size

5 Back (1)

3/4" x 15" x 20"

The author plowed dadoes across the side panels using a long fence, two miter gauges and a stop block. This ensured that the dadoes would line up evenly on both side panels.

below for sanding blocks and other supplies. I mounted a hacksaw blade to the lower right side for tearing full sheets into smaller pieces. Drive a few screws through the back to hang this project on the wall.

If you've got a box full of mismatched abrasives like I had, here's how to build this easy organizer for your shop.

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August 2009 Woodworker's Journal