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    Can NxN post hold Y weight?

    Scheduled Pinned Locked Moved Woodworking
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    • Dave RD Offline
      Dave R
      last edited by

      My point in suggesting the testing was for him to prove to himself than the post will support the weight. He was talking about gluing up 3/4" thick oak. With the small amount of weight he proposes to put on it, there's no way it would buckle.

      Assuming the post is securely anchored to some sort of base so that it can't tip over, there will be no problem with the post supporting the TV. There are boats with unstayed masts around 3" diameter. Those masts can support much more than 50 lbs of load laterally with no problem.

      Etaoin Shrdlu

      %

      (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

      G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

      M30

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      • W Offline
        watkins
        last edited by

        My suggestion is that you persuade your girlfriend NOT to buy a TV, and that you find other ways to amuse yourselves in the evenings.

        I would wait until you find somewhere to live and as the TV is likeley to be a flat screen, why not bolt it to the wall and free up some floor space.

        You might also find some help here http://www.engineering-international.com/#WoodDesign

        Regards, Bob

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        • Dave RD Offline
          Dave R
          last edited by

          Dear Bob,

          You always have the best ideas and this one is excellent. there's nothing worth watching on TV anyway. Thank you for the link, too.

          Etaoin Shrdlu

          %

          (THERE'S NO PLACE LIKE)

          G28 X0.0 Y0.0 Z0.0

          M30

          %

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          • bmikeB Offline
            bmike
            last edited by

            @dave r said:

            My point in suggesting the testing was for him to prove to himself than the post will support the weight. He was talking about gluing up 3/4" thick oak. With the small amount of weight he proposes to put on it, there's no way it would buckle.

            Assuming the post is securely anchored to some sort of base so that it can't tip over, there will be no problem with the post supporting the TV. There are boats with unstayed masts around 3" diameter. Those masts can support much more than 50 lbs of load laterally with no problem.

            ahh.
            got it.

            +1 on no TV.
            been TV free for 12? years now.

            mike beganyi design + consulting llc

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            • gillesG Offline
              gilles
              last edited by

              if you're fed up with TV your cat could enjoy!

              I played with the idea of James Owen
              http://www.dexigner.com/news/9849


              Leo_Cat_Scratching_TVPost.jpg

              " c'est curieux chez les marins ce besoin de faire des phrases "

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              • M Offline
                mrossk
                last edited by

                In Bruce Hoadley's book, "Understanding Wood" there is an examination of the compression strength of wood along various load axes. It is ridiculously strong. You can load a very narrow column that would break the floor before it would fail. Of course slight bending stresses change it from "pure" compression. But have you ever noticed how well trees do? They're pretty heavy πŸ˜‰
                Good luck, Michael

                https://www.mkaplanfinefurniture.com/

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                • M Offline
                  Masta Squidge
                  last edited by

                  Good information in the couple days I've been out.

                  As for not having a TV, trust me when I say I agree. I haven't watched TV on my own (without her begging me to "spend time with her" after work or something in years.

                  However, I won't complain about a big screen I can hook my PS3/Xbox360 up to. Currently I use my two computer monitors for them.

                  As for the base of this thing, it will be your typical TV stand. 18-20 inches deep and probably 50+ inches wide. Her current tv stand is a dresser that is 18x54x30 ish. Has enough room for her 32", and the various video devies stacked up next to it. That fills up 100% of the width of it.

                  A typical 55 inch (the biggest she said she would ever buy, and I agree) is about 52 inches wide I think. But having the bottom 30 inches up is way too high for a screen that big.

                  So what I was thinking was something about 20-24 inches high, with a post to mount the TV on just because it looks better like that.

                  Something with similar dimensions to this:

                  Object moved

                  favicon

                  (www.standsandmounts.com)

                  Except it won't be 600 dollars... Those things are pretty darn stable, the only way it can fall is backwards.

                  I might actually look into having something fabricated out of steel. I don't know how to weld, but my uncle does and has the tools to do it. We also know companies that can cut the pieces for low cost to me. That might actually be easier to do.

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                  • M Offline
                    mac1
                    last edited by

                    masta
                    Some tid bits of info for you. I pulled my spec for the Sony 46 XBR Bravia I have;

                    1. Weight 84 lbs
                    2. Size w/o its supplied stand 49 3/4 x 29 x 4 7/8 in
                    3. For wall mounting using their separately supplied wall mount bracket they recommend the load carrying capability be 4x the weight πŸ’š
                      BTW I designed a small stand like you are thinking and it failed proof load. I still have it setting on the floor
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                    • M Offline
                      Masta Squidge
                      last edited by

                      Failed proof load? I assume that means your stand wasn't up to snuff then.

                      Perhaps I should invest in some steel for this.... The only "important" reason for the post design is to be able to mount any size TV I want at the proper height. If I was just designing it for a specific TV I would simply build something to set it on top of with its included stand.

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                      • M Offline
                        mac1
                        last edited by

                        That is the reason for proof loads and the bonding beads / wires I was discussing above. If you do the joints correctly then the wood will fail before the glue joint does provided you get the correct bond line thickness. If you do a search in mags like Fine Wood Working they have presented testing showing various joints and the load carrying capability. The results will probably surprise you. I usually build a test model first to work out problem areas and that is what failed so no big loss except some time .

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