![]() ![]() If you don’t need the entire length you can either install the two supplied cord wrap brackets below the cord opening, or you can just stuff the cord back into the cabinet in the space between the inner and outer wall. In the picture above you can see the 5-1/2 foot, 14 ga cord for the power strip at full extension. Once I got the cabinet flipped upright again I installed the handle and the bumpers. I could be wrong, and I’m sure the smaller washers do the job, but that little detail bothered me. It seems to me, that for the size of the slot in the castor, you’d want a slightly larger washer to distribute the force more evenly. The only real question I had about the base was the small washers that shipped with the caster bolts. ![]() I was a little disappointed that they were hard plastic rather than rubber, but once I had the cabinet put together and filled it up, I had no problem rolling the cabinet over my dirty garage floor. ![]() The bracing the casters bolt onto and the frame around the perimeter are nice thick angle iron, I measured it to be 0.185″ or about 3/16″. When I flipped the cabinet over onto some of the packaging to protect the finish, I took note of the construction of the base. It’s going to take me several garbage cycles to get rid of it all, but that’s the tradeoff for ding and dent protection. This was a nice touch so I didn’t have to dig through all the drawers to find it.Īfter I’d cleaned up all the plastic bags, I thought I should get a shot of all the packaging. Milwaukee also thoughtfully placed tags on both the cabinet and the chest showing the location of the hardware. ![]()
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