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Thread: Crazy or not? Hand tool storage in a modern tool box?

  1. #1

    Crazy or not? Hand tool storage in a modern tool box?

    Like most hobbyists, storage of woodworking, household, gardening, and automotive tools in a garage is always a challenge, to put is mildly

    While I would love to dedicate an entire room or even an entire wall or even an entire storage area to one hobby, it's not happening around here.

    So, I want to know what fellow hand tool enthusiasts think of what may be a truly crazy idea:

    I am thinking of buying a large toolbox for storage of handtools and automotive tools:

    http://www.strictlytoolboxes.com/rol...r-cabinet.html

    I would line certain drawer bottoms with wood and store handplanes, chisels, and layout tools in these drawers. Dividers could keep tools from bouncing against each other or dulling blades. Other drawers would be full of sockets, wrenches, and screwdrivers. Larger handplanes would be laid on their sides due to limited height of drawers.

    A purists approach it certainly is not. Practical? Possibly.

    Am I crazy or not?

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jun 2009
    Location
    Madison, WI
    Posts
    345
    I'd say go for it. Although I would look for something cheaper than that. HF sells a fine 41" chest, as does Menard's (if you're in the right part of the country) Masterforce brand. You can get the top and bottom of each brand for under $700 when they're on sale. Very pleased with mine. Is it as good as a Snap-On? No, but could buy 5-10 of them for what the Snap-On costs.

    The only complaint I have with it is the lame lock, though that isn't a real issue and should only impact you if you work in a commercial shop--it'll keep the honest people and my daughter (once she's old enough) out, but a real thief will just smash it with a hammer and be inside in minutes. But you can say the same about every lock your house, so, meh.

    As a bonus, both brands have a 6" deep top drawer. 4 1/2 and smaller fit upright, the larger ones lay flat. I've got my 3, 2 4s, 2 4.5s, 5 1/4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 40 and 78 in the same drawer. The only reason the larger ones lay flat is due to their lateral adjustment levers getting in the way, and only slightly.

    Pictures if you're at all interested!

  3. #3
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Austin, TX
    Posts
    1,572
    I think you'd find out quickly why the preferable material for tools is wood, not metal.

    Pam

  4. #4
    Join Date
    Dec 2003
    Location
    Hutchinson, MN
    Posts
    600

    Joel at TFWW has an interesting tool box

    that you might think about:

    Joel's Knaack box

  5. #5
    Join Date
    Feb 2003
    Location
    Yorktown, VA
    Posts
    2,755
    Tony,
    The lousy economy has forced a lot of folks to sell their fancy heavy duty SnapOn tool boxes. Check CraigsList before you buy new. I use metal boxes for all my woodworking tools and neither they nor I have suffered any mental anguish from the experience

  6. #6
    Join Date
    Oct 2005
    Location
    Hudson Oaks, TX
    Posts
    68

    I have two sets of tool boxes

    I have two sets of Craftsman mechanics tool boxes in my garage. The first has mechanics tools and the second has woodworking tools. I used drawer liner from the grocery store to pad drawer bottoms in both.

    I think that this year is the year to make boxes or a cabinet for the woodworking tools, but the mechanics boxes have worked just fine for protection, avoiding dust, and rolling around.

    HB

  7. #7

    thank you

    i am not crazy. i'm going to take the advice of folks here, check out craigslist and see what I can buy used. A few inserts/dividers, and I have a new solution to a plane and saw till!

  8. #8
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
    Location
    Tallahassee, FL
    Posts
    722
    I started out with several metal tool boxes. I have since gotten rid of most of them in favor of wall mounted, wooden storage for hand tools. It just feels right to me.

  9. #9
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    extreme southeast Nebraska
    Posts
    3,113
    HF sells a big roll of the stuff you use to line drawers and shelves and use as a router pad for $6, just get several rolls and cut it to fit, then spray with some adhesive and to hold it in place on the bottom and sides, no need for dividers, tools won't slide around on it.
    Jr.
    Hand tools are very modern- they are all cordless
    NORMAL is just a setting on the washing machine.
    Be who you are and say what you feel... because those that matter... don't mind...and those that mind...don't matter!
    By Hammer and Hand All Arts Do Stand

  10. #10
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    extreme southeast Nebraska
    Posts
    3,113
    With me its a little like the Seaton Chest, but way down the ladder as far as ability. The tools came first, then the tools were put to use building storage for them.






    Then as I go interested in Woodies and other older tools and people were starting to ask me to demo WWing after seing some of my work to make and store my Smithing demo tools and one of my Son in Laws started carting alum press plate shipping containers down here. I used the salvaged wood to make several small bookcases for myself my S-I-L and one for my Smith Shop, I started using the older tools to make tool chests for the older tools but on a smaller scale so I could handle them.

    The one pictured above requires 4 people to move around, I built a 1/2 size farm wagon that it will just fit in for demos and used 2 pieces of 3 inch Alum Channel for ramps so I could load it into the back of my old muckldedun brown Suburban.
    Jr.
    Hand tools are very modern- they are all cordless
    NORMAL is just a setting on the washing machine.
    Be who you are and say what you feel... because those that matter... don't mind...and those that mind...don't matter!
    By Hammer and Hand All Arts Do Stand

  11. #11
    Join Date
    Aug 2003
    Location
    extreme southeast Nebraska
    Posts
    3,113
    FWIW, the two hand saws at the bottom of the lid are/were, brand new unused D-23 Disstons.
    Jr.
    Hand tools are very modern- they are all cordless
    NORMAL is just a setting on the washing machine.
    Be who you are and say what you feel... because those that matter... don't mind...and those that mind...don't matter!
    By Hammer and Hand All Arts Do Stand

  12. #12
    Quote Originally Posted by Tony Filippone View Post
    Like most hobbyists, storage of woodworking, household, gardening, and automotive tools in a garage is always a challenge, to put is mildly

    While I would love to dedicate an entire room or even an entire wall or even an entire storage area to one hobby, it's not happening around here.

    So, I want to know what fellow hand tool enthusiasts think of what may be a truly crazy idea:

    I am thinking of buying a large toolbox for storage of handtools and automotive tools:

    http://www.strictlytoolboxes.com/rol...r-cabinet.html

    I would line certain drawer bottoms with wood and store handplanes, chisels, and layout tools in these drawers. Dividers could keep tools from bouncing against each other or dulling blades. Other drawers would be full of sockets, wrenches, and screwdrivers. Larger handplanes would be laid on their sides due to limited height of drawers.

    A purists approach it certainly is not. Practical? Possibly.

    Am I crazy or not?
    I wouldn't worry about it as the point is to use them not to store them. Those types of cabinets are perfectly serviceable and beat the hell out of nothing.

    After your third or fourth masterpiece all will be forgotten about how your expertly used tools are stored.

    Have fun.

  13. #13
    Join Date
    May 2005
    Location
    So Cal
    Posts
    866
    Like most woodworkers when I first started I made a wood storage cabinet with drawers. I did turn out really well and it was a practice piece before I started making furniture for the house. After that I bought two metal toolboxes. Why? Very simply they are relatively cheap, they work really well and I can use my time to add more value by making furniture for the house rather than the shop.

  14. #14
    Join Date
    Nov 2006
    Location
    Sebastopol, California
    Posts
    2,319
    Half my planes and all my chisels live in a mechanic's (machinist's, actually) rollaway, a smaller version of the box you're considering. The California North Coast, where I live, has relatively even humidity throughout the year, although the winter gets damp. With a good liner in the drawers, I haven't had a problem with condensation.

    This might or might not be a problem in other parts of the country. When I lived in southeast Michigan, which gets insanely humid in August, I don't recall any problem with condensation in the rollaway that held my mechanic's tools.

    I concur with others: check out craigslist before spending retail, and shop around. I paid $20 for the rollaway that the woodworking tools are in. Last Christmas, I paid $140 or something like that for a Craftsman rollaway with ball bearing drawers (online - where prices are often different from the store, although you can then have it "delivered" to the store for no freight charge - I think "delivered" often means taking it from store inventory) for some specific storage needs. I think you could spend a lot less and get as much or more storage than the item you cited.

  15. #15
    I was running out of wooden solutions to storing tools (and wall space) and I caught a sale at Sears of a rolling mechanics drawer box like you are thinking about and it was on sale. Lined the drawers with the stuff Jr. mentioned above, and it works just fine. Thinner drawers for chisels, rasps, measuring tools, etc., the deeper drawers for shoulder planes, routers, plow and rabbets; and also the braces and bits.

    Sure, wood storage solutions, shop made of course, are "nicer" but I needed some quick storage and I the price of materials to build a chest with similar storage capacity would have exceeded the cost of the rolling base and chest top. This was the "economy" line of Sears, and you really don't load them with weight like you would with mechanics tools, so its been really satisfactory for me.

    That being said, once my bride has gotten her build list completed, I will eventually make a nice chest and some wall hanging units, but for now it works.

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