Well, I guess it depends on what's important to you. Sure, the rails make for some of the highest raw quantity, but you could even beat them by simply throwing sockets into a pile in drawer. What the Westling trays offer over other options, I guess, is functional efficiency. I only need a finite amount of sockets so, for me, quantity is only part of the equation. Another part is retrieval. In the orientation the trays put them in (up), a quick scan of my drawer tells me which socket to reach for (I get it right the first try 9/10 times). Then there's replacement. Anything that makes it faster and easier to put tools away when I'm done with them, helps with productivity. At the end of a long project, The last thing you want to do it put tools away. It might sound silly, but the idea of being able to drop them on a peg in one simple motion, sometimes makes the difference here; and putting the tools away in designated locations in the box at the end of the day, or at the end of a job, is the best way to make absolutely certain you will know where they are the next time you need them.
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