Dowel Filament Racks

PLEASE NOTE: – The middle rods are not included; these are meant to be used with existing dowels. – These aren’t very sturdy on their own – they work best when “converting” an existing shelf to a filament storage shelf.

The goal was low filament usage in a fairly specific use case.

These can potentially work freestanding, but for that, I’ll honestly recommend other more sturdy models that are available on MakerWorld and other 3D model sites.

In my example (see photos), I used ½” (~12.7mm) wooden dowels from a hardware store.

They were cut just a few mm shorter than the inside width of an Ikea Kallax cube shelf, then these prints turned each cube into 2 rows of filament storage.

Combined with wooden dowels and wedged into an existing enclosed space, they work well and use very little filament.

For a longer distance, a ½” dowel would bend in the middle so the raw files also contain numerous variations to support larger dowels.

Pieces Bases These are what the dowels are placed into.

These can be used standalone, or legs can be added.

They come in numerous sizes, allowing for dowels from 10mm to 26mm in diameter (or roughly 3/8″ to 1″).

Legs These snap into the bottom of the bases to raise them up 100mm.

They are meant to be a tight fit, but there’s also a Loose Fit version if they won’t push together.

Any set of legs will work on any base.

Dowels BYOD (bring your own dowels) I used very cheap wooden dowels from a local hardware store and cut them to the needed length.

Metal or plastic (such as PVC) should also work as long as their diameters are within the size range of 10-26mm.

The included print profile is a “complete set” of 4 bases and 2 legs.

The profile only includes the 13mm bases, which can accommodate ½” dowels (or anything less than 13mm).

How To Two bases can be paired with two dowels to make a rack.

The dowels simply drop into place, then the weight of any filament spools will push the dowels down and apart, “locking” them in.

Legs can be added to make a rack taller.

Legs can only be installed one way, and there are arrows on the back to help line things up: Stability These aren’t meant to be the strongest racks available, but there are a couple options for adding stability.

If you use them against a wall (such as inside an existing cabinet or cube storage), there are screw holes in the base to hold them firmly to that wall.

Double-sided tape should also work.

There are small holes behind where the dowels sit, and you could use a small screw or nail to secure the dowels to the base.

If used freestanding, I do not recommend adding the legs; it will be very wobbly.

Print Settings These can use the built-in 0.20mm Standard profile in Bambu Studio, but increase to 3 walls.

I’m open to feedback, but may not be able to make significant changes to this one.

Feel free to remix.

share this design:

Facebook
Twitter
Pinterest

Still hungry? Here’s more