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  2. 32 mm cabinetmaking system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/32_mm_cabinetmaking_system

    Shelf where holes are placed with 32 mm distance center-to-center for mounting of shelf supports and individual shelves. The 32 mm cabinetmaking system is a furniture construction and manufacturing principle used in the production of ready-to-assemble and European-style, frameless construction custom cabinets and other furniture.

  3. IKEA Lack - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IKEA_Lack

    The IKEA Lack table in white. The Lack (stylized as LACK) is a table manufactured by IKEA since 1981. [1] Modifications.

  4. IKEA Billy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/IKEA_Billy

    The cost to IKEA of the incident was estimated to be between $6 and $7 million. [7] In 1999, IKEA replaced the lacquer coating on the white bookcase with melamine foil. [1] In 2009 Bloomberg instigated a "Billy bookcase index", as an alternative to the Big Mac index, to compare relative price levels in different countries around the world. [8] [9]

  5. Shelf (storage) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shelf_(storage)

    A simple wooden wall shelf A wooden shelf with a great number of different hair colours in a hairdresser shop in Germany Floating Shelf & Floating Shelf Bracket installation Diagram. Courtesy of Shelfology® A shelf (pl.: shelves) [1] is a flat, horizontal plane used for items that are displayed or stored in a home, business, store, or

  6. Wall plate - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_plate

    Lower wall plates, base plate, floor plate, or bottom plate [4] — a second lower wall plate to which the wall studs are through nailed and which is the bottom of the wall section when assembled as a rectangular assembly. On an upper story, the lower wall plate is nailed to the platform of the supporting floor. The supporting platform is being ...

  7. Structural integrity and failure - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Structural_integrity_and...

    Collapsed barn at Hörsne, Gotland, Sweden Building collapse due to snow weight. Structural integrity and failure is an aspect of engineering that deals with the ability of a structure to support a designed structural load (weight, force, etc.) without breaking and includes the study of past structural failures in order to prevent failures in future designs.

  8. Hogging and sagging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hogging_and_sagging

    Hogging is the stress a ship's hull or keel experiences that causes the center or the keel to bend upward. Sagging is the stress a ship's hull or keel is placed under when a wave is the same length as the ship and the ship is in the trough of two waves.

  9. Continental shelf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Continental_shelf

    The shelf usually ends at a point of increasing slope [3] (called the shelf break). The sea floor below the break is the continental slope. [4] Below the slope is the continental rise, which finally merges into the deep ocean floor, the abyssal plain. [5] The continental shelf and the slope are part of the continental margin. [6]