I don't think that is extreme at all. It's tough to do precision woodworking when the moisture content of the wood is changing. If one has access to the final location for the project, acclimating the wood to the ambient humidity in that location is best. For example, wood flooring manufacturers recommend leaving the wood flooring in the room where it will be installed for a few days before installation. They also recommend opening the packages and spreading out the pieces, since the wood won't exchange much moisture with the air when it is stacked.
For storage, though, stacking maintains a more consistent moisture content. Once wood absorbs moisture, it can be difficult to dry it back to a lower moisture content. Thus, the process is to stack the KD dry so that the moisture content remains in the range it was when it was dried. Then, when one is ready to use it for a project, the wood is acclimated to the shop or the project location and allowed to absorb the humidity from that area.
If you are concerned, tables showing the force required to extract and shear the fastener are available. If you have 4 fasteners for example, and each fastener resists 300 lbf, you can apply close to 1200 lbs of pull out pressure before they will fail, in theory.
The concern is that lumber is heavy, more so that people often really appreciate. It doesn't take that much lumber to get a ton of weight. If the lumber is on shelf bracket type supports, the leverage of the bracket effectively increases the force. Thus, the forces can be a lot higher than seems intuitive.
If one is only storing a hundred board feet or two, probably not a significnt issue either way. If one is storing more than a few hundred board feet, though, I would suggest at least checking the forces to make sure the design limits of the wall are not exceeded, particularly since walls are not usually designed to resist much lateral stress.
For storage, though, stacking maintains a more consistent moisture content. Once wood absorbs moisture, it can be difficult to dry it back to a lower moisture content. Thus, the process is to stack the KD dry so that the moisture content remains in the range it was when it was dried. Then, when one is ready to use it for a project, the wood is acclimated to the shop or the project location and allowed to absorb the humidity from that area.
The standards I was looking at will attach to my cmu wall with 3/16" tapcons. I figure they should hold quite a bit.
The concern is that lumber is heavy, more so that people often really appreciate. It doesn't take that much lumber to get a ton of weight. If the lumber is on shelf bracket type supports, the leverage of the bracket effectively increases the force. Thus, the forces can be a lot higher than seems intuitive.
If one is only storing a hundred board feet or two, probably not a significnt issue either way. If one is storing more than a few hundred board feet, though, I would suggest at least checking the forces to make sure the design limits of the wall are not exceeded, particularly since walls are not usually designed to resist much lateral stress.

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