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A freestanding open-front display shelf for mini vinyl records and their player. Choose the number of cubbies, the number of columns (1-3) and the overall size; reserve a taller bottom bay for the player to sit in (it lands in the only / right / middle column); hold records with a front lip (lean them face-out), a back slot (stand them upright), or both; and toggle the crown molding and ornamental groove lines that give it the look of a real piece of furniture.
How many record cubbies are stacked in each column, above the optional player bay.
Number of side-by-side columns of shelves. The player bay sits at the bottom of the only column (1), the right column (2), or the middle column (3), and that column is made wider than the record ones. Widen the shelf when adding columns.
Overall width of the carcass (left to right). Split across the columns (the player column wider). Crown molding, if on, overhangs a few mm beyond this.
Front-to-back depth of every shelf — must be deep enough for the player to sit in the player bay.
Clear interior height of each record cubby. ~60 mm gives a mini vinyl on its display stand room to spare.
Make the bottom compartment a taller open bay for the mini vinyl player to sit in, as in the reference photo.
Clear interior height of the player bay. Set it a few mm taller than your player; ignored when player_bay is off.
How records are held: lip=a low front rail so records lean back against the panel, face-out; slot=a groove near the back so records stand upright; both=a back slot AND a front lip.
Height of the front retaining rail. Used by the 'lip' and 'both' display styles; ignored for 'slot'.
Thickness of the shelves, sides, top and bottom. A multiple of 0.4 mm (nozzle width) is FDM-friendly.
Thickness of the thin back panel that closes off the rear of the cubbies.
Add a stepped crown cornice on top and a matching plinth base, for the look of a real piece of furniture.
Cut fine ornamental groove lines across the front of each shelf — the decorative reveal lines of a real shelf.