Small Parts Rack From Repurposed Chick-Fil-A Fruit Cups

by e024576 in Workshop > Workbenches

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Small Parts Rack From Repurposed Chick-Fil-A Fruit Cups

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When dining at my local Chick-Fil-A, I usually substitute a fruit cup for waffle fries (40 vs. 400 calories).

The fruit cup container looked useful, so instead of throwing them in the trash, I started taking them home and washing for future use.

So to make a long story short, here's a small parts rack made from 5 fruit cup containers and some wood. I use it to store small electronic parts. A conduit clamp securely attaches the rack to my worktable. The original clear covers can be used to help protect stored items.

The basic design is a starting point that can be scaled up or revised as needed. Perhaps other food containers common to fast food restaurants and processed food can be repurposed like this.

Materials and Tools

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Materials:

5X Chick-Fil-A medium fruit cup containers

About 4 ft of 1 by 2 (actual dimensions are 3/4 by 1 1/2 inches) pine board

About 20 inches of 1/4 by 3/4 pine board (you can use any board less than 1/2 thk and 5 inches wide)

Wood Glue

1/4-20 hex head bolt 1/2 inch lg.

1/4-20 carriage bolt 2 1/2 lg

2X 1/4 inch flat washers

2X 2-1/2 lg wood screws

Conduit clamp matching the thickness of table where you plan to install rack. My table was 1/2" thick so I used this

Paper labels

The following material is used only as an assembly alignment aid (see Step 3)

3X 1" by 4" 1/4 hardboard

2X 3 1/2 " lg 2 by 2 board

Tools:

Wood Saw - I used a power miter saw, but any saw that can squarely cut boards is ok

Drill press or handheld drill with 1/4" and 5/32" bits

Router with 3/16" dia. straight bit

Tape measure and combination square

3X 12 inch bar clamps




Fabricate Boards

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Using 1 x 2 Pine board (actual dimensions 3/4 x 1 1/2) fabricate the follow parts:

a) Cut 2 pieces 16 inches long. Install 3/16 diameter straight bit in router and set cut depth to 3/8 inch. Cut five slots per DWG A: Slotted Uprights.

b) Cut 1 piece 5 inches long and drill 1/4 and 5/32 holes per DWG B: Top Cross-Member

c) Cut 1 piece 3 1/2 inches long. This is the bottom cross-member.

Using 1/4 thick by 3/4 wide wood strip (you can use any board less than 1/2 thk and 5 inches wide)

d) Cut 1 piece 16 3/4 inches long and drill two 1/4 holes per DWG C:Rear Upright.

e) Cut 1 piece 1 1/2 inches long. This is the bottom spacer.

Cut assembly alignment aids

f) Cut 3 pieces of 1/4 hardboard 1 inch wide and 4 inches long.

g) Cut 2 pieces of 2 x 2 boards 3 1/2 inches long

Assemble Rack

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a) Attach top and bottom cross-members to the slotted uprights - refer to illustration Rack Assembly part 1 of 3.

b) Attach rear upright and conduit clamp as shown - refer to illustration Rack Assembly part 2 of 3.

c) Glue bottom spacer between the rear upright and bottom cross-member as shown - refer to illustration Rack Assembly part 3 of 3.

Installation

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a) Locate the rack as desire on your table and tighten the conduit clamp. Note - the photo shows it clamped to the front rather than the rear of my table, but I just did this for better camera access.

b) Load parts into fruit cup containers and slide into rack slots. Optionally you can fit translucent cover to seal the top and/or add paper labels.

Enjoy !