I have a cabinet building quesiton that I figured I'd pose to the board, since most people have a great grasp on woodworking. I am about 50% completed with the entire project, and I have a slight problem that I could use some help with.
I am building a cabinet with rotating panels. To hold the panels intact and to allow rotation without opening any doors or anything I'm installing 3/8" diameter pegs into the side of the cabinet which will sit flush to the wood (there will be a spring mechanism allowing them to pop out). The problem I'm having is that the pegs are metal and they currently make contact with the wood on the side of the cabinet and the interior control panel triange. Right now this works great and keeps everything in place, but as time goes on and the panels take some abuse the wood will compress, the holes will increase in size, and there will be more give in the panel. Obviously this would be bad for a rotating panel cabinet.
What I thought of to solve this problem is to epoxy the appropriately sized washers around the holes so that the metal pegs insert into the holes and would never increase the hole beyond the center of the washer, which would keep the woode from expanding. However, when I tried to do this my results were not as stellar as I had hoped. When I finished epoxying them in place and tested the results I had a very hard time getting the pegs to go through every triangle, since everything to align perfectly. Being off a millimeter or two prevents the pegs from sliding into the hole, and it's darn near impossible to get it precise when I'm dealing with epoxy and small washers.
I'm wondering what you all thought would be a good solution to this problem? Is the washer method a good solution? Is there another way to keep the pegs from damaging the wood and causing more give in the panel? Is there an alternate locking mechanism that you'd recommend aside from steel pegs going through the panel? I was originally thinking of a slide bolt or a window lock, but I would need a panel that flipped open to do that, so I could conceal the lock.
I'm at a loss about this and I want to make sure it's perfect, so any help is immensely appreciated.