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Folks Of Interest Alternative Tool storage

Discussion in 'The Hokey Ass Message Board' started by LilBlue82, Jan 31, 2018.

  1. LilBlue82
    Joined: Dec 16, 2015
    Posts: 102

    LilBlue82

    I've seen threads like this before on here only for old tool boxes. however i'm just curious what else everybody uses for storing there tools, I have a white cabinet i have yet to paint. and a shop i worked in the bosses sun turned a filing cabinet into his paint gun storage box. I am looking for unique ideas. and if you want show me your old tool boxes, or shops.
     
  2. Johnny Gee
    Joined: Dec 3, 2009
    Posts: 14,422

    Johnny Gee
    Member
    from Downey, Ca

  3. midnightrider78
    Joined: Oct 24, 2006
    Posts: 1,358

    midnightrider78
    Member

    I had one of those Duracell battery displays that is about 3 foot square with casters and peg board on all sides. I used that for a few years just because it was different and free.
     
  4. RaginPin3Appl3
    Joined: Mar 31, 2016
    Posts: 1,270

    RaginPin3Appl3
    Member

    I have a 60s metalflake kitchen counter top bolted onto some metal kitchen cabinets, Its beat up but it works great for storing larger tools that don't fit in my craftsman
     
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  5. Mr48chev
    Joined: Dec 28, 2007
    Posts: 36,050

    Mr48chev
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    Deep 5 drawer file cabinets usually run 20 to 25 bucks at the local Habit for Humanity store. I've got three or four left out of the batch that I bought through the GSA online auction that had been in a Social Security office in Wenachee WA. It only worked for me because I had to go up there for work when I picked them up so the trip was paid for. Those are intended to be storage units for the parts for each project but one may become the storage unit for the larger equipment that is in cases or not in cases like the sawzall and other power tools. That may cut down on the "where the hell is that now" issue I have now. Many of the small specialty tools may end up in one of the file cabinets too.
    I'm not a big fan of having that many parts or tools out on display like I see in photos of some guys shops. I'd rather have the tucked away out of sight and out of mind for the most part. The obsolete tools that I have collected over the years will probably be on a peg board as that has always been the intent of hanging on to them. Not much call for a cross the cells electric voltage tester with probes and a meter to read individual cell voltage now though.
     
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  6. Rex_A_Lott
    Joined: Feb 5, 2007
    Posts: 1,158

    Rex_A_Lott
    Member

    I had a friend that used to run a grading business. He would use his track hoe to load an old Coca-Cola truck on the low boy trailer, haul it to the job site, and use that for the tool box on out of town jobs. Maybe a little bigger scale than you were thinking, but I always thought that was a pretty good idea.
     
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  7. s55mercury66
    Joined: Jul 6, 2009
    Posts: 4,367

    s55mercury66
    Member
    from SW Wyoming

    Old metal desks, the larger and more drawers the better. Doubles as a work bench. Any type of metal cabinet on wheels works great for me also. Filing cabinets I like for larger objects, and I also like roll carts. I am not a fan of huge, high dollar toolboxes, even though customers can be very impressed with the sight of them. I, myself would rather spend a few thousand on tools and equipment.
     
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  8. partsdawg
    Joined: Feb 12, 2006
    Posts: 3,945

    partsdawg
    ALLIANCE MEMBER
    from Minnesota

    Another vote for Habitat for Humanity stores. Used cabinets can be bought for cheap and can keep those valuable tools hidden. With a little thinking outside the box there are many items that can be used to outfit a shop or garage.
     
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  9. lucas doolin
    Joined: Feb 7, 2013
    Posts: 598

    lucas doolin
    Member

    By KENTUCKY state law, all surplus merchandise must be sold at public auction. Some years ago the University of Louisville remodeled the dental school. All sorts of metal cabinets, desks and book shelves were sold, usually Steelcase quality (good as Snap-On, Matco etc.) for cheap. Great opportunity to outfit your garage or shop with high tech looking storage at rock bottom prices. Also acquired trade-in or "scratch and dent" items from industrial furniture companies for next to nothing.
     
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  10. stanlow69
    Joined: Feb 21, 2010
    Posts: 7,346

    stanlow69
    Member Emeritus

    I`ve got about 20 + filing cabinets. For example: top drawer of one is used for battery tools and testers. Next drawer down is cables and hardware. Next is for jumper cables and chargers. And the bottom drawer is for extra car batterys. And I`m not a mechanic.
     
  11. LilBlue82
    Joined: Dec 16, 2015
    Posts: 102

    LilBlue82

    My thinking exactly, i would rather have an old filing cabinet with performance parts decals than worry about weather my brand new snap on box is waxed and shiny
     
  12. BigDogSS
    Joined: Jan 8, 2009
    Posts: 982

    BigDogSS
    Member
    from SoCal

    I used an old IBM tape-drive cabinet for a few years. 6 feet tall. The actual drive weighed a couple hundred pounds. The cabinet was very heavy-duty and was on wheels. I should kept it.....
     
  13. BamaMav
    Joined: Jun 19, 2011
    Posts: 6,969

    BamaMav
    Member Emeritus
    from Berry, AL

    I've got two old metal hanging kitchen cabinets on my walls full of different stuff, one I keep mostly paint and chemicals in. I've also got a metal shelf that I took out of a old telephone company pickup I once owned, it sits beside my box and I have one box on top of it. I also kept a drawer cabinet out of that same truck, it's full of used nuts, bolts, wire, and just general junk that I said, "I might need this sometime".
    My tool boxes are used, scratched, dented, and dirty. Pretty much like me when I'm out in the shop!
     
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  14. Another good strong cabinet is an industrial electrical cabinet, often tossed when machines are upgraded or s****ped. Salvage yards let them go cheap, because the metal isn't thick enough to go as #1.
     
  15. GTS225
    Joined: Jul 2, 2006
    Posts: 1,301

    GTS225
    Member

    *****************************************************************************

    Steve is sooo right. Have two of them out in my detached garage, both on casters. One is a single door, about three feet wide and 6 feet tall, and the other is a two-door, about 6 feet wide and 6 tall. Easy to mount hasps and padlocks to, and hang drop cords and air hoses on the front.

    Roger
     
  16. BamaMav
    Joined: Jun 19, 2011
    Posts: 6,969

    BamaMav
    Member Emeritus
    from Berry, AL

    One thing I forgot to mention I have is a old double door refrigerator. I store my welding rods and wire in one side, it's airtight so moisture doesn't get in. The other side has an ***ortment of stuff, some small parts for my car I don't want to lose, light bulbs and such, switches, trim pieces, etc.
     
  17. zzford
    Joined: May 5, 2005
    Posts: 1,822

    zzford
    Member

    I used to work at an independant VW shop years ago. We had a guy there that although he had a perfectly good tool box, most of his tools were ****tered about on the floor. He referred to the floor as his "bottom box, bottom drawer". A good guy, but a real slob. His tools were never in danger of rusting, because there was always puddles of oil and grease everywhere.
     
  18. flathead41ford
    Joined: Aug 25, 2010
    Posts: 481

    flathead41ford
    Member
    from Mentor OH

    0EDDA4E0-5A4E-433D-9BE7-A61B7598372D.jpeg F1363EB9-D697-4F19-AD86-CD7C0D05FE3A.jpeg I keep my ryobi tools in this vintage gas stove.
     
  19. Hot Rods Ta Hell
    Joined: Apr 20, 2008
    Posts: 4,781

    Hot Rods Ta Hell
    Member

    Blue print drawers! CAD and computer storage have made these fairly obsolete in offices. My friend has a few at his shop that he bought at a school (Junior College) surplus auction. His are a neat, dark grey wrinkle finish USA made about 50 years old. They're heavy, stackable and have high quality roller bearing slides. They're generally really wide though, (about 40") and have shallow drawers. The really old ones are of wood construction. The addition of these allowed him to get small stuff such as drill bits, reamers, blades, small parts, etc. out of boxes and neatly laid out in drawers.
    A drawer could also neatly hold finished parts or a sub ***embly such as a blown apart carb and rebuild kit waiting to be ***embled without any worries about loosing parts.

    I've never understood the need for a $10,000 Snap On box in a casual garage. Maybe if you're a career wrench, otherwise it just seems like a ******* contest.

    Like most of my tools, all of my tool storage boxes and chests are used. I've a large, Stanley Vidmar rolling drawer cabinet that my Brother in law gave me. It holds all my air and power tools. Also, two Craftsman rolling drawer chests with intermediate drawers and top boxes along with a Kennedy top box. All were bought at garage sales. The recent Craftsman rolling chest and box I got by accident at a garage sale late in the day. I was on my way home and saw the chest and decided to stop to look for tools. The guy said he was moving out quick and he'd load the roller and chest in my car for $5 each! Nobody was interested because they had some stickers and had a handle missing. I may just do a repaint of it.

    [​IMG]

    [​IMG]
     
  20. TagMan
    Joined: Dec 12, 2002
    Posts: 6,367

    TagMan
    ALLIANCE MEMBER

    ****y cell phone pic - please excuse.

    These are some old library card cabinets I found - sold off cheap to make was for the computerizion of the Dewey Decimal System info, I was told. One is a 72-drawer maple cabinet & drawer unit, found at a swap meet for $100 delivered & set in place in my shop. The other is a 30-drawer unit from an antique store for $40.00. The drawers are about 3"x5"x15" (too damn cold to go out and measure them!). All I did was cut off the metal rods which went length-wise through the drawers and held the cards in place. Lots of room to store nut, bolts, washers and all kinds of hardware & small tools.

    [​IMG]Library Cabinet by TagMan, on Flickr
     
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