The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

If you’re like me, you have a heavy-duty kitchen, ready for all recipes, dishes and situations, with plenty of room for prep and lots of pots and pans. It’s a busy environment with plenty of need for some tough, REALLY tough shelves. Well, I’ll give you some sage advice: invest in the toughest shelves you can afford. The tougher the better. Because your kitchen is going to become a whirlwind tornado of activity and bowls and splattering of food and cans and boxes of raw material (if you cook at home). And equipment, lord knows you’re going to need shelves for your kitchen equipment. Well, that equipment is heavy, so you’re going to need the best, and the toughest. How about a wire shelving unit that can handle 4000 pounds? That’s right, 4000. Four THOUSAND.

This Heavy Gauge Shelving Kit - 4000 lb. Capacity is a triumph. I found it over at StacksAndStacks.com while looking for new and innovated shelves. Mission accomplished. It holds 800 lbs (evenly distributed) per shelf! This Shelf Unit is tougher than anything I’ve found in a Garage Shelf, or a Closet Shelf, or a Wall Shelf, or even a Bookshelf. It’s one tough customer. But wait, now that I think about it, it COULD work for them as well! The metal shelves would be great for the garage for tools and paint cans, pitch-perfect in the pantry, and lovely in the living room for your tv and dvds! Each kit comes with five 18″D wire shelves, which are fully height adjustable, and four 72″ poles. 4000 pounds. Man alive, that’s a tough shelving system.

The Heavy Gauge Shelving Kit - 4000 lb. Capacity. Highest Possible Recommendation.

Share and Enjoy:
  • Digg
  • Sphinn
  • del.icio.us
  • Facebook
  • Mixx
  • Google

12 comments ↓

#1 Bob Wald on 02.13.09 at 11:49 pm

Terrific. Simply terrific. i think I may have to order more than just a few. These will really help out around the house, and more. Wonderful.

#2 Richard Parker on 02.13.09 at 11:51 pm

Glad I could help. The kitchen is always a point of organization attack for me. it’s the front line, and also a danger zone. it can get dirty, fast. The more shelves the merrier.

Richard Parker’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#3 Bob Wald on 02.13.09 at 11:52 pm

You’re not kidding. I STILL DON’T HAVE ENOUGH SHELVES TO GO AROUND. Can you believe it? STILL? “The more shelves the merrier” is a pretty neat tag line. Did you make it up, or did you read it somewhere?

#4 Richard Parker on 02.13.09 at 11:53 pm

I always write original material. You can quote me, but give me credit if you do.

Richard Parker’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#5 Bob Wald on 02.13.09 at 11:54 pm

Will do, pal! My wife can’t stop laughing, laughing… because it’s true! TRUE! “The more shelves the merrier.”
Good work.

#6 Bob Wald on 02.13.09 at 11:58 pm

In your next post I think it might be time to explore thermodynamics, both applied and relating to conversion.

Just a suggestion.

#7 Richard Parker on 02.13.09 at 11:59 pm

Well, Bob, I don’t know that it would be relevant.

Richard Parker’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#8 Bob Wald on 02.14.09 at 12:00 am

Really? To shelves and shelving units? Why? Certainly a thermodynamic system is composed of particles, whose average motions define its properties, which in turn are related to one another through equations of state. How does that not relate?

#9 Richard Parker on 02.14.09 at 12:01 am

Shelves hold things.

Richard Parker’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#10 Bob Wald on 02.14.09 at 12:02 am

Yes they do, and that’s EXACTLY my point! Thermodynamics can be combined to express internal energy and thermodynamic potentials, which are useful for determining conditions for equilibrium and spontaneous processes! How can you say, in good conscience, that this has NOTHING TO DO WITH shelves?!

Bob Wald’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#11 Richard Parker on 02.14.09 at 12:03 am

This has nothing to do with shelves.

Richard Parker’s last blog post..The 4000 Pound Elephant in the Kitchen.

#12 Bob Wald on 02.14.09 at 12:04 am

Fair enough.

Leave a Comment