| Scenario | Width | Depth | Height | Shelves | Sections | Record | Jacket | Packing | Approx. Total |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Garden studio shelf | 90 cm | 35 cm | 33 cm | 3 | 2 | 12" | Single | 0.95 | ~170-210 records |
| Compact crate | 50 cm | 34 cm | 34 cm | 1 | 1 | 12" | Gatefold | 0.92 | ~35-55 records |
| Singles drawer | 60 cm | 22 cm | 22 cm | 1 | 2 | 7" | Single | 0.98 | ~130-180 records |
The calculator treats records as vertical slices along shelf width. It splits total internal width into equal sections, then applies a packing factor.
- sectionWidth = (totalWidth - (sections-1)*dividerThickness) / sections
- usableWidth = sectionWidth * packingFactor
- itemThickness = recordThickness + jacketAllowance + outerSleeveAllowance
- capacityPerSection = floor(usableWidth / itemThickness)
- totalCapacity = capacityPerSection * sections * shelves (set to 0 if fit check fails)
- Measure internal shelf width, depth, and height clearance.
- Enter shelf count and how many sections each shelf has.
- Select record size and jacket type that matches your collection.
- Set packing factor lower if you want airflow and easy pulling.
- Press calculate, then export CSV or PDF for your plans.
Why Accurate Capacity Planning Matters
Vinyl storage is load bearing and space constrained. A small thickness change can shift capacity by dozens of records across multiple shelves. Accurate estimates reduce overcrowding, prevent jacket warping, and keep access smooth when your garden studio doubles as a listening area. Planning also helps you choose shelves with enough depth and height clearance for the record size you collect.
Key Inputs That Drive Capacity
Capacity depends on usable width per section and thickness per stored item. Usable width is your internal shelf width minus divider losses, multiplied by a packing factor. Item thickness combines record thickness, jacket type allowance, and optional outer sleeve allowance. Sections per shelf multiply capacity, while shelf count scales totals. Depth and height inputs are used for fit checks so the tool can stop unrealistic results.
Interpreting Packing Factor and Clearances
Packing factor models the intentional gaps that protect sleeves and improve handling. Values near 1.00 represent tight library style packing. Lower values reserve space for finger access and airflow, helpful near plants and humidifiers. Back clearance and top clearance add fit tolerance and reduce scuffs. If fit checks fail, the calculator returns zero capacity because forcing tight storage risks damage.
Planning Weight and Structural Safety
The weight estimate uses your average record weight and total capacity. This helps verify that shelves, brackets, and fasteners can support the load, especially on tall racks. Consider dynamic loads when pulling records and leaving space for moisture barriers or dehumidifiers. If your shelf is adjustable, distribute heavier box sets across lower levels to reduce tipping risk.
Using Exports for Inventory and Layout Decisions
CSV export is ideal for tracking different shelves, sections, and collection types. Save scenarios for 7 inch singles, 10 inch records, and 12 inch LPs, then compare totals. PDF export provides a clean reference for planning a build, labeling cubbies, or sharing a layout with installers. Recheck inputs after adding sleeves or changing divider thickness to keep projections current.
1) Why does the calculator return zero capacity sometimes?
When depth or height is below the required minimum for your chosen record size plus clearances, the fit check fails. The tool sets capacity to zero to avoid unsafe or damaging storage assumptions.
2) What packing factor should I use for easy access?
Start around 0.90 to 0.95. Lower values leave more finger space and reduce sleeve friction, which helps when you pull records frequently or store them near plants where airflow matters.
3) How do jacket types affect the count?
Jacket allowances add thickness per item. Gatefolds, double albums, and box sets occupy more width than single jackets, so capacity drops. Use the jacket type that matches your average collection mix.
4) Should I measure external or internal shelf width?
Use internal width. External measurements ignore side panels and dividers, which can overstate usable space. Internal measurements give a realistic section width and a more accurate record count.
5) Is the weight estimate accurate enough for design checks?
It is a planning estimate based on your average grams per record. If your collection includes many box sets, increase the average weight and consider placing heavier items on lower shelves.
6) Can I use inches and still get millimeter precision?
Yes. Inputs in inches are converted to millimeters internally, then used for thickness and fit checks. This keeps results consistent across unit systems and avoids rounding issues.