Roller Doors
Moderators: Jason Susnjara, Larry Epplin, Clint Buechlein, Scott G Vaal, Jason Susnjara, Larry Epplin, Clint Buechlein, Scott G Vaal
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
Roller Doors
Hi,
I'm trying to do a cabinet with a roller door.
How could this be done?
I'm trying to do a cabinet with a roller door.
How could this be done?
-
- Wizard Member
- Posts: 1896
- Joined: Wed, May 18 2005, 7:54PM
- Company Name: Milltech Millworks Ltd.
- Country: CANADA
- Location: Edmonton, Alberta
- Contact:
-
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1740
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 8:33PM
- Company Name: Timeless Cabinetry and Mantles
- Location: South East
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
- Peter Walsh
- Guru Member
- Posts: 460
- Joined: Thu, May 19 2005, 3:15PM
- Location: Palm Springs, Ca
- Contact:
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
- Peter Walsh
- Guru Member
- Posts: 460
- Joined: Thu, May 19 2005, 3:15PM
- Location: Palm Springs, Ca
- Contact:
Bryan,
In simplest terms, you can either buy or build the flexible door (I would Google for a pre-built one myself, in the right wood of course), then route a dado track into the sides to fit. If you are building the unit by hand then I probably would not invest time into using the part editor to create the dado track. If you were using a CNC then of course you would want to do that so the machine created the track.
Basically, the door is made of individual slats bound together on the backside by a flexible membrane. Probably less expensive (time-wise) to buy one.
Hope this helps. Maybe some other members know where you can buy this type of unfinished flex door material. It is also sometimes known by the name \"tambour.\" This link shows pix on a roll-top desk being assembled: http://www.van-vliet.org/dempseywoodwor ... desk.shtml
regards,
In simplest terms, you can either buy or build the flexible door (I would Google for a pre-built one myself, in the right wood of course), then route a dado track into the sides to fit. If you are building the unit by hand then I probably would not invest time into using the part editor to create the dado track. If you were using a CNC then of course you would want to do that so the machine created the track.
Basically, the door is made of individual slats bound together on the backside by a flexible membrane. Probably less expensive (time-wise) to buy one.
Hope this helps. Maybe some other members know where you can buy this type of unfinished flex door material. It is also sometimes known by the name \"tambour.\" This link shows pix on a roll-top desk being assembled: http://www.van-vliet.org/dempseywoodwor ... desk.shtml
regards,
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
- Peter Walsh
- Guru Member
- Posts: 460
- Joined: Thu, May 19 2005, 3:15PM
- Location: Palm Springs, Ca
- Contact:
Bryon,
You should be able to build it in eCab and produce a beautiful rendering.
For the Tambour you could either use individual display board strips or a display board strip that has three or four scores in it made in the editor and then duplicated. Duplication is done after editing is finished and you have returned to the cabinet editor by highlighting the display piece, press Control-C and then press Control V to paste a copy. You can move all of them around but it is much easier if you place the first piece in the exact place you want it and then copy. That way the pasted piece will be in the same plane and easily placed.
MAKE SURE YOU ASSOCIATE EACH DISPLAY PIECE WITH THE CABINET! This is done by highlighting the piece and right clicking.. choose \"associate\".
That way when you save the cabinet, the display parts you made will be saved with the cab otherwise they will not and will disappear.
regards,
You should be able to build it in eCab and produce a beautiful rendering.
For the Tambour you could either use individual display board strips or a display board strip that has three or four scores in it made in the editor and then duplicated. Duplication is done after editing is finished and you have returned to the cabinet editor by highlighting the display piece, press Control-C and then press Control V to paste a copy. You can move all of them around but it is much easier if you place the first piece in the exact place you want it and then copy. That way the pasted piece will be in the same plane and easily placed.
MAKE SURE YOU ASSOCIATE EACH DISPLAY PIECE WITH THE CABINET! This is done by highlighting the piece and right clicking.. choose \"associate\".
That way when you save the cabinet, the display parts you made will be saved with the cab otherwise they will not and will disappear.
regards,
-
- New Member
- Posts: 9
- Joined: Mon, Mar 20 2006, 6:07PM
- Location: New Zealand
- Contact:
- George Davidson
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1585
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 1:16PM
- Location: Norwood Pa.
-
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1740
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 8:33PM
- Company Name: Timeless Cabinetry and Mantles
- Location: South East
George,
You must not have a job. You are becoming a fantastic contributor with this forum. The presentations and ideas you come up with are great. Keep it up.
You must not have a job. You are becoming a fantastic contributor with this forum. The presentations and ideas you come up with are great. Keep it up.
Intel Core i7-5820K (6-Cores, 3.3GHz, 15MB Cache)
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650
32Gigs DDR4
NVIDIA GeForce GTX 960 4GB
SSD 840 256Gig, 2TB, 3TB, Samsung (2TB)
Corsair RM650
- George Davidson
- eCabinets Beta Tester
- Posts: 1585
- Joined: Tue, May 17 2005, 1:16PM
- Location: Norwood Pa.