Chaddyboy
United States Olathe Kansas
Bloooooop.
Bluuuuuurp.
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Ever since my wife and I bought our house, I've been patiently waiting to fix up the gameroom as we worked through the rest of the rooms. After months of electrical work, scraping, mudding, painting, and arranging the rest of the house, I finally got to the game room!
The room started off as a mess. It had been a 6 year old's bedroom while the previous owners lived here. One wall (the wall that is now the big wall o' games) was covered with corkboard which, when removed, took a good deal of the drywall paper with it. Thus, I did the logical thing and covered the entire wall with sheet metal. While I was at it, I decided to sheet metal half of another wall as well. Looks pretty sweet with the 50's retro table and chairs!
After sheet metalling, it was time to tackle the game shelving. I decided to be difficult on myself and make them all from scratch. I came up with the idea of using threaded rods as the supports, and then using nuts and washers to hold up the shelves. I imagine I'm not the first to come up with the idea, but hey, I was still excited about my brainstorm, so a few AutoCAD drawings later, I headed to Home Depot and had them cut some 3/4" MDF into 8' by 16" strips for me. It took some convincing on my part, since apparently cutting a sheet of MDF into thirds is "precision cutting", and Home Depot won't do that for you. After explaining that full sheets wouldn't fit in my car, however, the guy grudgingly decided to help me and cut up a few sheets for me. It took a whole 5 minutes after 10 minutes of arguing. After all the "help" I got at Home Depot, I went to the local hardware store to buy the threaded rod, nuts, and washers.
$200, some wordworking, and some elbow grease later I was all ready to assemble the shelving! This was a real pain in the arse, as once the bottom two shelves are on and the unit is stood up, it takes a really long time to spin the nuts all the way down the rods to put the rest of the shelves on. Also, a little advice if you ever do this yourself; always drill the holes in the shelves slightly bigger than whatever size rod you're using. Trust me, a 5/8" hole does not slide down 6' of 5/8" threaded rod very easily. If I had made the holes 3/4", my job would have been a heck of a lot easier!
However, all the work paid off. The shelves adjust to the exact heights I need them, so all I had to do was sort my games by size, make some minor adjustments to the shelves, and I was all set to fill 'em up! And fill them up I did.
Now I just had to move in my sweet vintage looking table and chairs, hang a few things on the walls (including my Carcassonne art) and the game room was complete. All ready for gaming!
I still have some minor paint touch ups and trim work to do, but here are the results!
*figures, the last picture with the least in it doesn't want to show up at normal size! It's mainly to show the Carcassone scenes, which a few people have asked me about.
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FullContactGEEK
Canada Toronto Ontario
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Nice job on the shelving. I had made threaded rod shelves in the past and yeah, I found them to be a pain to assemble. But they served their purpose at the time. Personally I found that the exposed threads will wear away at whatever is near them because it is usually hard to keep things neat and accidents can happen. My solution was to go back to the store to pick up some clear vinyl tubing about the same inner diameter as the threaded rod. I cut the tube to length and then split it so it could be wrapped around the exposed threads. Then, no more worries about accidental damage!
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Jim Cote
United States
Maine
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Sweet!
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Sifu
United States Beaverton Oregon
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That is a pretty sweet period table and chairs. I have so many fond memories of playing Go Fish! with granny at just such a table.
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David Reed
United States College Station Texas
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Looking good! I'm in the process of redesigning my gaming room/computer/library/home office. I'm hoping to have it more aligned for board gaming before the end of the month (super long gaming weekend with 9 people), so this is an inspiration for me. My big perk in my room is a full-sized (4'x8') white board that someone tossed out at work. Not only is it fully functional, it's magnetic! This has been useful for computer gaming weekends, and I suspect that it will be even more useful for a boardgaming weekend (I'm thinking that I could set up a magnetic game of something that takes an absurd amount of time, has next to no player interaction and folks can walk by and take their turns - like Empire Builder or another crayon rails game).
Enjoy your new gaming room!
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Chaddyboy
United States Olathe Kansas
Bloooooop.
Bluuuuuurp.
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Quote: My solution was to go back to the store to pick up some clear vinyl tubing about the same inner diameter as the threaded rod. I cut the tube to length and then split it so it could be wrapped around the exposed threads. Then, no more worries about accidental damage!
Yup, I had the exact same idea with the vinyl tubing! But since I kept the shelves so tightly packed, the end games rest against the nuts, keeping them spaced a little ways away from the threaded rod. I'll probably eventually do the tubing thing just in case, though.
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Robert Zurfluh
United States Cranbury New Jersey
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Now I have a place to stay one day when I am taking a cross-country trip accross the USA.
Enjoy....cool room....
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Matthew Fisk
United States Spanish Fork Utah
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I am going to have to wait until 5 kids are grown up and moved out of the house before I can try something like that. But it sure looks great!
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John Carlton
United States Shawnee Kansas
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Very sweet. Too bad there's no room left on that shelf for a Formula De league trophy!
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Mark Casiglio
United States Shelton Connecticut
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I just drooled on my keyboard.
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Scott Alden
United States Dallas Texas
Aldie's Full of Love!
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Cool! Those are nice shelves.
Nice to see SR in the center of the table. I just got my copy in the other day along with Lightning Reaction!
Also, can you post close ups of the carcassonne framed works?
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M C
Canada Lethbridge Alberta
Trying to think of something witty to put here. Any ideas?
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A thing of beauty!
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Mary Weisbeck
United States Black Hawk South Dakota
Even virtual dice hate me!
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Woo Hoo, Trias!

Very nice work, Chaddy. I actually like the sheet metal, it reflects light and makes the room look bigger. I raise my glass to you.
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chaddyboy_2000 wrote: . . . so tightly packed, the end games rest against the nuts. . . .
I hate when that happens.
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Matthew M Monin
United States Branford Connecticut
8/8 FREE, PROTECTED
That guy
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Swanky! Totally dig the table and chairs. They look nice and conductive.
-MMM
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Jon Theys
United States Oklahoma City Oklahoma
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Very nice. BTW, the threaded bolt type furniture has been referred to as a "flexi-rack" in other venues, commonly used in a three-legged arrangement for a simple, easily-adjusted (and leveled) home entertainment center (read as: TV stand, with shelving for DVD players and video games).
And if you need to thread the nuts up and don long distances, a rubber tubing on a variable speed drill works wonders. Just hold the rubber-coated drill bit (or sanding drum, or whatever you got) up against the nut, and spin away....
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Chris Bailey
United States Broomfield Colorado
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Doesn't storing games on their sides warp the boards?
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Matthew Frederick
United States Phoenix Arizona
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ixnay66 wrote: Doesn't storing games on their sides warp the boards? Depends on whether or not you ask the people who say that storing them on-edge warps the boards.
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Chris
United States Huntington Station New York
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That's very cool.
chaddyboy_2000 wrote: I still have some minor paint touch ups and trim work to do
If anything gets better then let's see it!
Consider sitting in front of the wall o' games. It'll look impressive as heck behind you, to everyone else.
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Ryan Wheeler
United States Mobridge South Dakota
Do you wonder what Ryan Wheeler thinks about certain games? If you do, you are strange and wonderful and may GeekMail him to request an opinion on any game in his collection. He just may respond.
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Oh my gosh!
You're already out of shelf space!
You should get some vices to thread onto the rods so you can SQUEEEEEZE the games closer together. Infinite expandability (or would that be collapsability?).
Then, not only would it be very nice. It would be perfect.
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Gabe Alvaro
United States Berkeley California
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THAT is fa-rickin sa-weet!
Nice racks!
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Emily Rogers
United Kingdom Totnes Devon
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Congratulations!

yingchugma http://www.buddhawheel.co.uk "bringing the result into the path"
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Charley Eastman
United States Franklin Massachusetts
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Fire up the soda fountain.
I'm on my way over.
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Congrats!!!!!!
Now i want to live with you  Bye!!!
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Congrats!!!!!!
Now i want to live with you  Bye!!!
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