Diamond Wine Rack

Winemaking Talk - Winemaking Forum

Help Support Winemaking Talk - Winemaking Forum:

This site may earn a commission from merchant affiliate links, including eBay, Amazon, and others.
Joined
Jul 26, 2021
Messages
182
Reaction score
289
Location
North Carolina Mountains
I have a skinny space to fit a wine rack and I decided to do the 60 degree diamond idea. I was able to get really good efficiency from the diamonds but the triangles left over really waste space.
This gets me 100 bottles so perhaps I shouldn’t complain!
Any suggestions before I start cutting?

winerack.png
 
Your aspect ratio looks a little steep. What efficiency do you get with 4 “sections” instead of the 3 you have now
Well, it is true that the side triangles are not terribly efficient. However, if your drawing is accurate, it is not so bad in your case. You can fit 20 bottles in a full diamond. You are showing 8 bottles in a "half-diamond" (AKA, a triangle). So that is not too bad a penalty.

If you haven't already seen this, it could be useful: https://www.winemakingtalk.com/threads/finally-built-my-wine-rack.44954/page-2#post-513850
Thanks
I think this makes sense.
Alternately, I could do it like this but then I get 4 really annoying corners.

rack3.png
 
I think you will get better efficiency with a cube, then stack those cubes as high as you can.

Edit.. I’ve also seen a site that recommends 16” wide x 12” high to maximize the number of bottles you can store. Also saw one site that mentioned a tilt of 15-20 degrees, to keep the cork moist. That sounds like overkill.
7312EFBA-7C7E-4C78-9C50-84C0D2843505.jpeg
 
Last edited:
I think you will get better efficiency with a cube, then stack those cubes as high as you can.

Edit.. I’ve also seen a site that recommends 16” wide x 12” high to maximize the number of bottles you can store. Also saw one site that mentioned a tilt of 15-20 degrees, to keep the cork moist. That sounds like overkill.
View attachment 117647
My understanding is that by having cube angles at 60 degree rather than 90 degree improves bottle stacking efficiency by like 15%.
 
Back
Top