Here I am again staring at the small mountain of hand tools on a shelf
in my shop, wondering what the
best solution would be for wall-mounting them. I bought the magnetic
thing but the magnets are too weak.
Most other systems require a configuration for each type of tool. In
trying to picture the "ultimate" system,
I see either a linear arrangement of pouches or a big rectangle of
them, with the pouches themselves
being similar to what you'd find in the five gallon bucket systems,
made of heavy clear plastic so the
tools can be seen. Haven't found anything on the internet yet.
Leon wrote:
>
> Why not a tool box?
>
I'm slowly changing all of my shop storage from open shelves and
pegboard, to rollaways, drawers, and cabinets.
Open storage simply collects to much dust, overspray, etc... All
shelving and cubbies will now get doors, and tools will go in drawers or
boxes.
Yard sale dressers are cheaply available and awesome for shop storage.
[email protected] wrote:
> Here I am again staring at the small mountain of hand tools on a shelf
> in my shop, wondering what the
> best solution would be for wall-mounting them. I bought the magnetic
> thing but the magnets are too weak.
> Most other systems require a configuration for each type of tool. In
> trying to picture the "ultimate" system,
> I see either a linear arrangement of pouches or a big rectangle of
> them, with the pouches themselves
> being similar to what you'd find in the five gallon bucket systems,
> made of heavy clear plastic so the
> tools can be seen. Haven't found anything on the internet yet.
I have a couple of the magnetic tool holders. http://
www.magnetsource.com/Consumer%20Pages/ToolHoldersHS.html
They're rated for 20#/in - plenty strong enough to hold even larger
heavier tools. I could hang my Stanley #7 from them, but I don't.
R
> I don't like the idea of plastic to hold tools. Plastic is famous for
> trapping moisture. Rust will not be far behind.
I don't like the idea of plastic either - in addition to potential
moisture issues, I can picture it tearing quite easily, especially if
used with any pointy or sharp or heavy tools. If you do go with
plastic, I'd use a fabric or mesh backing for the pockets, and see if
you can figure out some way of reinforcing the attachment points and
bottoms of pockets. Who knows - it could work well - let us know. If
you want an inexpensive, temporary solution of this type to try, you
could look for one of the "grandma's closet door shoe-pocket hangers",
something like this: http://www.dormbuys.com/index.php?
action=imageview&type=item&id=743
We use one of these organizers for little household stuff like shoe
polish, flashlight batteries, sunscreen, and other stuff that's not
used often but is nice to keep accessible.
As far as shop storage, my frequently-changing hand tool storage
system currently consists of the following:
Pegboard hooks for pliers, wrenches, squares, drill, earmuffs,
glasses, etc.
Pegboard hoops for screwdrivers
Magnetic strip for chisels
Home-made magnetic strip with rare earth magnets in a strip of poplar
for hand saws (this way the teeth aren't touching metal)
Small shelves for hand planes (the nicer ones are kept in "plane
socks")
Various other shelves, toolbox drawers, hooks, and screws in the
ceiling hold a variety of other tools.
Hope this helps,
Andy
On Feb 8, 10:40 am, "Andy" <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I don't like the idea of plastic to hold tools. Plastic is famous for
> > trapping moisture. Rust will not be far behind.
>
> I don't like the idea of plastic either - in addition to potential
> moisture issues, I can picture it tearing quite easily, especially if
> used with any pointy or sharp or heavy tools. If you do go with
> plastic, I'd use a fabric or mesh backing for the pockets, and see if
> you can figure out some way of reinforcing the attachment points and
> bottoms of pockets. Who knows - it could work well - let us know. If
> you want an inexpensive, temporary solution of this type to try, you
> could look for one of the "grandma's closet door shoe-pocket hangers",
> something like this:http://www.dormbuys.com/index.php?
> action=imageview&type=item&id=743
> We use one of these organizers for little household stuff like shoe
> polish, flashlight batteries, sunscreen, and other stuff that's not
> used often but is nice to keep accessible.
> As far as shop storage, my frequently-changing hand tool storage
> system currently consists of the following:
> Pegboard hooks for pliers, wrenches, squares, drill, earmuffs,
> glasses, etc.
> Pegboard hoops for screwdrivers
> Magnetic strip for chisels
> Home-made magnetic strip with rare earth magnets in a strip of poplar
> for hand saws (this way the teeth aren't touching metal)
> Small shelves for hand planes (the nicer ones are kept in "plane
> socks")
> Various other shelves, toolbox drawers, hooks, and screws in the
> ceiling hold a variety of other tools.
> Hope this helps,
> Andy
Thanks for taking the time to post this link, that's pretty much what
I had in mind. In the meantime I just put up a couple
of shelves and have everything laid out operating-room style.
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Here I am again staring at the small mountain of hand tools on a shelf
> in my shop, wondering what the
> best solution would be for wall-mounting them. I bought the magnetic
> thing but the magnets are too weak.
> Most other systems require a configuration for each type of tool. In
> trying to picture the "ultimate" system,
> I see either a linear arrangement of pouches or a big rectangle of
> them, with the pouches themselves
> being similar to what you'd find in the five gallon bucket systems,
> made of heavy clear plastic so the
> tools can be seen. Haven't found anything on the internet yet.
>
I don't like the idea of plastic to hold tools. Plastic is famous for
trapping moisture. Rust will not be far behind.
If you must a transparent cover, perhaps some form of acrylic sheet with
LOTS of vent holes to make sure no moisture gets trapped.
What kind of hand tools are you talking about?
Storage needs of gardening tools, lawn and auto
maintenance and maybe some DIY plumbing and
electrical stuff are far different than say wood
working "bench tools" - chisels, mallets, hand saws,
layout tools etc..
For woodworking tools, a hanging wall cabinet and
a drawer unit built under the woodworking bench
can do wonders for the way you work - less time
hunting tools down, more time spent using them
and easy to put back in their home when not in
use.
charlie b
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote in
news:[email protected]:
> Here I am again staring at the small mountain of hand tools on a shelf
> in my shop, wondering what the
> best solution would be for wall-mounting them. I bought the magnetic
> thing but the magnets are too weak.
> Most other systems require a configuration for each type of tool. In
> trying to picture the "ultimate" system,
> I see either a linear arrangement of pouches or a big rectangle of
> them, with the pouches themselves
> being similar to what you'd find in the five gallon bucket systems,
> made of heavy clear plastic so the
> tools can be seen. Haven't found anything on the internet yet.
>
Why not just use pegboard and hooks? You can get some stuff that's
plenty strong to hold your hammers (heaviest hand tool I can think of at
the moment that I'd hang), as well as being completely reconfigurable on
demand.
Want a screwdriver holder? You can make a simple one that fits into the
pegboard and either attaches to the hooks or is held on by bolts.
Puckdropper
--
Wise is the man who attempts to answer his question before asking it.
To email me directly, send a message to puckdropper (at) fastmail.fm
"[email protected]" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Here I am again staring at the small mountain of hand tools on a shelf
> in my shop, wondering what the
> best solution would be for wall-mounting them. I bought the magnetic
> thing but the magnets are too weak.
> Most other systems require a configuration for each type of tool. In
> trying to picture the "ultimate" system,
> I see either a linear arrangement of pouches or a big rectangle of
> them, with the pouches themselves
> being similar to what you'd find in the five gallon bucket systems,
> made of heavy clear plastic so the
> tools can be seen. Haven't found anything on the internet yet.
>
Why not a tool box?
"B A R R Y" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Leon wrote:
>>
>> Why not a tool box?
>
>
> I'm slowly changing all of my shop storage from open shelves and pegboard,
> to rollaways, drawers, and cabinets.
>
> Open storage simply collects to much dust, overspray, etc... All shelving
> and cubbies will now get doors, and tools will go in drawers or boxes.
>
> Yard sale dressers are cheaply available and awesome for shop storage.
My problem is that there is not enough wall space. ;~) Walls are for
leaning scrap plywood against.