Simple and effective. Jobs a good'n. If I could offer a tip - when you screw them to the studs/walls, offset the screws in relation to each other a little. Either side of a centre line by about 5-10mm say. Done in a straight line, you get a little side to side waggle. Offsetting near as damn it eliminates this.
I got this outdoor bar. Was planning on a square frame at the bar window. So glad I saw this, three of the brackets and marble top awesome. No leg intrusions. Thanks man!
I made a 12 foot cat ladder to connect 2 outdoor catio's in the front and back of the house at different levels thru cat walks I'm still working on it! Thanks!
Really nice one, you've given me a new idea, usually i use 6*6 L clamps and then i used to cut a metal bar around 4mm thick and weld them diagonally from one edge to another, try this if possible, I can assure you this method is also heavy duty one.
I liked this idea of making brackets but I lost my drill bit extension. So I attached the 'L' brackets to the workshop wall and then added the 2 plywood braces afterwards. Thanks for the idea, now I really must find that extension. UPDATE I just fetched some timber this afternoon from the top shelf in my workshop and guess what rolled off? lol.
As Sergai would say "Simples" nice design and a good use of scrap wood, thanks for sharing, you could put one lower down for Dylan to have a little snooze
good work! I feel just using an extra third offcut to make a complete triangle would make it exponentially stronger, cheaper and less complicated to make. but yours are really pretty and plenty strong
Makes it harder to screw in to the wall unless you put your pilot holes at an angle or put the hypotenuse piece up after the 90 is mounted to the wall. Or you have a stubby right-angle impact driver. The plywood also helps with lateral rigidity (left-right wiggle after mounted), though offsetting the screws instead of having them lined up in the center would also help.
Great brackets and easy to make. The only problem here in Slovakia is where to find 12 mm reclaimed/used plywood. New sheets are horribly expensive, not everywhere to purchase and often even not good quality.
Same problem in Hungary. You can not find left-over materials if it can be still useful. Unless you have your own business, so then you start to save up the left overs. An another possibilty is when people place furnitures out on the street, (specific event) then you go and collect them. Although there is already some mafia who controls that who can take those and where. So you don't want to run into that kind of situation, when they start to explain it to you how does it works...
@@RagnBoneBrown I have no experience with MDF. It's not widely available over here, nearest town where I can buy it is at least 20 km. I have no idea about prices. OSB is the same. You can buy only whole sheets. The nearest shop where I can have sheet material cut into manageable pieces (which fit in my car) is 45 km. But only if the don't have an excuse that at the day I'm there they can't cut due to illness or broken machine.
yup.... usable and surprisingly strong. The main differences are color, sandability, and drying time. Wood glue sands nicely, pva will sort of soften under heat from sanding. I use em on areas where I dont sand and when im not in a rush.
Simple and effective. Jobs a good'n. If I could offer a tip - when you screw them to the studs/walls, offset the screws in relation to each other a little. Either side of a centre line by about 5-10mm say. Done in a straight line, you get a little side to side waggle. Offsetting near as damn it eliminates this.
Nice tip 👍
Best straight forward video on strong brackets yet ty so much for the plywood tip
Awesome! I might use these for a closet.
Used your design and set it up in my shop. Works like a charm. Thanks!
I got this outdoor bar. Was planning on a square frame at the bar window. So glad I saw this, three of the brackets and marble top awesome. No leg intrusions. Thanks man!
Looks like the workshop is coming along nicely! Keep it up dude
Sometimes the simplest are the most effective, Great use of scraps. Thanks for posting.
❤ your hang test!
Good job! I Definitely dig the utility of them.
I made a 12 foot cat ladder to connect 2 outdoor catio's in the front and back of the house at different levels thru cat walks I'm still working on it! Thanks!
Really nice one, you've given me a new idea, usually i use 6*6 L clamps and then i used to cut a metal bar around 4mm thick and weld them diagonally from one edge to another, try this if possible, I can assure you this method is also heavy duty one.
Thank you, just the job for my workshop.
Thank you so much for this video. Precise, easy to follow, to the point. 2:11
Easy, simple but functional! And thats what it is all about! Nice one again Keith.
Nice and simple, no need to over complicate. I like it mate!
Nice and simple, and more than enough for what you need there. 👌🏽
Nice job mate.👍🏽
Done the same in my workshop. Basically free and super strong.
Nice video, I have these already in my garage workshop, very strong for all my wood
I liked this idea of making brackets but I lost my drill bit extension. So I attached the 'L' brackets to the workshop wall and then added the 2 plywood braces afterwards.
Thanks for the idea, now I really must find that extension.
UPDATE
I just fetched some timber this afternoon from the top shelf in my workshop and guess what rolled off? lol.
Simple yet effective! They'll probably last a life time!
I was looking for brackets to hold up a couple of 6-ton jack stands. I have a 12" W x 24" L and those homemade shelf brackets look perfect. Thanks!
As said below your workshop is really looking good Mate 👍 👍
Great job mate... Going to copy for my own shed!
Great!
Kind of cantilever brackets. Nice one mate great video
Simple but brilliant. I definitely need to put this high on our to-do list! Great video as always.
Thanks.
As Sergai would say "Simples" nice design and a good use of scrap wood, thanks for sharing, you could put one lower down for Dylan to have a little snooze
Mmm. Just done some painting in my own man cave - using a very similar green - Johnstone's racing green - a nice gloss.
Are all the pilot holes needed? I'm gonna try this thank you.
Wonder if is good for cat wall tree ?
What impact drill do you use there? And how does it compare to likes of ryobi and dewalt?
Had some scraps lying around, so I built one! Timber off the floor now and out of the way!
I see you have found a new place for the horseshoe. Best wishes from Yorkshire.
I have it a coat of paint too 😁
not a fan of green, but I do like the design. Are these considered corbels?
The 2x4s what size are they
good work! I feel just using an extra third offcut to make a complete triangle would make it exponentially stronger, cheaper and less complicated to make. but yours are really pretty and plenty strong
Makes it harder to screw in to the wall unless you put your pilot holes at an angle or put the hypotenuse piece up after the 90 is mounted to the wall. Or you have a stubby right-angle impact driver.
The plywood also helps with lateral rigidity (left-right wiggle after mounted), though offsetting the screws instead of having them lined up in the center would also help.
Hi Keith recently built my new shed workshop cause you had a shed. What would you recommend for security? What did you use
I have two security cameras and lots of locks
For peaces of wood....
You look like you’ve lost some weight, Keith! Your “heavy duty test” for brackets may not be such a test anymore! :)
I wish haha
Don't worry, he had his wallet in his pocket lol
Nice short vid
Great brackets and easy to make. The only problem here in Slovakia is where to find 12 mm reclaimed/used plywood. New sheets are horribly expensive, not everywhere to
purchase and often even not good quality.
Same problem in Hungary. You can not find left-over materials if it can be still useful. Unless you have your own business, so then you start to save up the left overs.
An another possibilty is when people place furnitures out on the street, (specific event) then you go and collect them. Although there is already some mafia who controls that who can take those and where. So you don't want to run into that kind of situation, when they start to explain it to you how does it works...
I think MDF would offer a good amount of shear strength too if that's available? Not as much strength as plywood though but I'm sure it's be fine
@@RagnBoneBrown i would stay away from MDF using structural (or load bearing) stuff. OSB or MFP would be even better
@@RagnBoneBrown I have no experience with MDF. It's not widely available over here, nearest town where I can buy it is at least 20 km.
I have no idea about prices. OSB is the same. You can buy only whole sheets. The nearest shop where I can have sheet material cut into
manageable pieces (which fit in my car) is 45 km. But only if the don't have an excuse that at the day I'm there they can't cut due to illness or
broken machine.
Is PVA white glue that's used for sicking paper/cardboard usable for wood if you run out of wood glue? Great video mate!
yup.... usable and surprisingly strong. The main differences are color, sandability, and drying time. Wood glue sands nicely, pva will sort of soften under heat from sanding. I use em on areas where I dont sand and when im not in a rush.
@@nurabdul1436 Thanks nur. Good to know!
Very nice. Odd colour choice for the brackets. Unless, of course you're a........... Norwich fan 🤣
are you going to the woodwork show at Harrogate 15th of November i am
Ok, I'm about a minute 30 in. Caught something. Will edit
If you were to guess, how much weight do you think 3 could support. Looking to store a lot of scrap wood. Thanks!
Each can take 80kg (roughly how much I weigh)
Thanks!!!!
I see that sponsorship has killed off your old faithful induction mitresaw
new workshops a little echoey. might be worthwhile to do the voiceover in the house until you finish the insulation...