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What's on your walls? Neat storage ideas!

JonnyC

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Joined
Jun 12, 2013
Messages
372
Location
Green Bay, WI
That's really nice. I don't weld, so I wimped out and bought a prefab version:

I used to have it mounted on my bench leg, but it kind if got in the way so I attached two heavy duty magnets to it and now I stick it on the side of my storage cabinet when the torch is not in use and then bring it out and stick it on the floor cabinets when I'm using it.

Tommy

Thanks for this! I noticed they have them at Mendards, so I'll pick up one for my garage and one for my basement.
 
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Project_shadow

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Joined
Jun 14, 2014
Messages
677
Ditto! :bowdown:

I keep shuffling my Race Ramps around on the floor not thinking how I could store them more efficiently. Love this idea. [emoji481]
Mine unfortunately are metal, and a bit twisted, they reside in the project truck bed as of recently lol

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Bessy

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Joined
Dec 18, 2012
Messages
995
Location
Ontario, Canada
Hey Bessy, is that a suburban in in your avatar ?
Nice vintage mower !
Sorry, I missed this post before. Yes, Farleyfan, it's a 1971 Suburban 12hp. Bought it in 2008, with a 42" dozer blade and 42" mower deck. It's been repainted since, (went orange this time, close-ish to the 68/69 paint scheme) and I'm awaiting a new fuel pump to come in as the walbro autopulse leaks and has ruined some of the paint on the front end. Hoping to have it back up and running in time for 2071 lol...5aa8b98212ee159b53f6a21c62169838.jpgcc622b9b904bcb656ec47cf6453dd39c.jpg

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Grumblebum

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Joined
Aug 10, 2015
Messages
1,940
Location
Wollongong Australia
Made use of my panel door to store fishing rods with some clips made from an offcut 1" poly irrigation pipe. Each clip is 2" long and has a slit cut from it. Just cut a small section out first and test on the fishing pole and take a bit more out if you need.

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Used pop rivets to attached to the door.

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And the rods clip in nice an snug.

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At the tip end of the rods, I added some velcro strips behind when riveting them on so they can be secured.

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Has worked well.

Cheers GB :beer2:
 

madwi

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Joined
Jun 6, 2015
Messages
67
Location
West Michigan
Been meaning to post this and finally got around to taking a pic this weekend. Storage for my car ramps, a $10 towel bar from Home Depot. They're next to the overhead door utilizing space that was kinda wasted anyway.

Good idea. :thumbup: I ended up hanging mine from a leftover piece of rubbermaid wall organizer thing. Ramps fit between the studs and keeps them out of the way a bit.
 

Dan in Pasadena

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Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,158
Location
Pasadena, CA
My car ramps are the old fashioned stamped steel ones so kinda heavy for the towel bar idea(?) Anyone think it would still work or have a better idea for storing them up out of the way?
 

Kenstone1

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Joined
Oct 2, 2015
Messages
734
Lotsa tools....

Nice...
I have come to build shallow/one item deep shelves now, because I hate reaching around an item to get something behind it, with that item usually getting knocked down.

All the shelves in my sheds are shallow/between the studs., so no floor space is lost.
jmo,
:)
 

DRP6833

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Joined
Feb 10, 2011
Messages
504
Location
Firestone, CO
My car ramps are the old fashioned stamped steel ones so kinda heavy for the towel bar idea(?) Anyone think it would still work or have a better idea for storing them up out of the way?

Make your own "towel bar" out of threaded iron pipe and fittings, it should hold 'em.

Thanks for all the kudus, guys and gals!
 

GrayFlattop

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Joined
Jan 18, 2018
Messages
1,051
Location
Chicago
Also had a couple of feet of wall space behind a drill press. Turned out to be unsought space for pry bars and other implements of destruction. I ended up scrapping some of my old, bent rusty crow bars so their replacements are even prettier - for now.9ba60b279a15e8fd6936fd0d59785cfa.jpg


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drivesitfar

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Oct 23, 2013
Messages
36,040
Location
Pacific Northwest
ALL: I don't know how I missed this cool thread, but I've already seen several ideas on how I CAN GET ORGANIZED.

thank you all for contributing some great ideas!!
 

Crazyjake8493

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Joined
Sep 26, 2014
Messages
3,977
Location
Upstate NY
Made use of my panel door to store fishing rods with some clips made from an offcut 1" poly irrigation pipe. Each clip is 2" long and has a slit cut from it. Just cut a small section out first and test on the fishing pole and take a bit more out if you need.

View media item 87159
At the tip end of the rods, I added some velcro strips behind when riveting them on so they can be secured.


Cheers GB :beer2:

I need to do something like that soon. All my fishing poles are in the basement in the corner and everytime I need one they're tangled together.

I hate that the garage door is such a big area of wasted space, especially since the door is rarely used. This should make good use of most of it.
 

flyng_fool

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Joined
Nov 9, 2007
Messages
3,377
Location
Frisco, TX
Also had a couple of feet of wall space behind a drill press. Turned out to be unsought space for pry bars and other implements of destruction. I ended up scrapping some of my old, bent rusty crow bars so their replacements are even prettier - for now.9ba60b279a15e8fd6936fd0d59785cfa.jpg


Sent from my iPhone using The Garage Journal mobile app

Yes, but do you have a VW microbus for those implements of destruction?
 

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guyerst

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Joined
May 10, 2010
Messages
49
Location
Zeeland, MI
My car ramps are the old fashioned stamped steel ones so kinda heavy for the towel bar idea(?) Anyone think it would still work or have a better idea for storing them up out of the way?

I have mine sitting vertically on a 2x4, with wheel barrow brackets to hold the tops in place. Mounted the brackets 1/2" high to give enough room to slide the ramp in place. Honestly, you could make the upper overhang out of anything (scrap wood). All the weight is on the base.
 

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astrohip

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Mar 7, 2015
Messages
339
Location
Brenham TX
As well as the shovels and rakes!

My shovel & rake holder...


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Rewind97

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Joined
Feb 15, 2013
Messages
1,549
Location
Mississippi
I really need to make something like that.. all mine are thrown in a corner of my shed so I can never get what I need.

I do as well. I have a corner in my shop that is just a cluttered mess with those type of yard tools. Inevitably the one you need is the one covered up by all the others!!!
 

Dan in Pasadena

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Joined
Feb 18, 2009
Messages
13,158
Location
Pasadena, CA
Looks good. Dimensionally, would they fit side-by-side on that short wall so you could use the rest of it for something else?

I wish I had a small unused wall like that. But I’ll find a place...eventually.
 

Unruh

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Joined
Aug 12, 2017
Messages
1,431
Location
Silverdale, Washington
So I’ve been looking for a way to store extension cords other than the tried and true nail on the wall and let them hang method. I found plans for a cord caddie and went with that.

First I made six of these. The dowels are spacers and are cut at 1 1/2" for my shorter cords and at 2" for my longer cords.

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Here is one put together.

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The arms pivot in allowing for easy removal.

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Unruh

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Aug 12, 2017
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1,431
Location
Silverdale, Washington
Got the shelves done! I think they turned out really nice. Overall the dimensions are 48” wide X 12” high X 13” deep.

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I put in the cords and they fit!! I also added some places for my belt sanders and some other slots for whatever.

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gemniii

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Joined
Jul 20, 2015
Messages
112
Location
Fulton, Ms
I've read about a third to half of this great thread and have gotten many good ideas. But I have not run across any solutions for pallet racking.
I've four "shops" totalling about 5,000 sq ft. About half of the walls are lined with pallet racking, total about 180 linear feet, ranging from 44" to 48" wide and 8' to 12' tall with from 3 to 5 shelf levels.

Half of these are set up so the first level is a comfortable working level with the first "shelf" layer being composed of either 2x4 or metal braces supporting 3/4 PT plywood with a 3/4" piece of MDF on top for a "sacrificial" work surface. Then levels above the work surface are just regular racking.

Thus, I've about 10 "worktables" which are 44" to 48" wide and 8' to 9' long. It's hard to reach the side that is up against the wall.

I've also a bunch of repurposed kitchen cabinets which I could fit on the back of the first shelf. I'd like to put the cabinets on the some sort of rollers so I could push them back against the wall, or pull them out when I need access.

Any suggestions for rollers? I'm thinking the cabinets will rarely weigh over 150lbs and "appliance rollers" will be my best bet.
 

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Dumber than lumber

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Dec 19, 2015
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1,934
I've read about a third to half of this great thread

Any suggestions for rollers? I'm thinking the cabinets will rarely weigh over 150lbs and "appliance rollers" will be my best bet.

I don't know what u mean by appliance rollers. I go to Northern Tool or Hardened Fart and get furniture dollies. Remove the wheels and use them on roll-around carts, etc.
 

CoachR_9426

Member
Joined
May 6, 2015
Messages
9
Location
NW Arkansas
Got the shelves done! I think they turned out really nice. Overall the dimensions are 48” wide X 12” high X 13” deep.

attachment.php


I put in the cords and they fit!! I also added some places for my belt sanders and some other slots for whatever.

attachment.php

Thats a great idea. I may steal it! :thumbup:
 

ckucia

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 23, 2008
Messages
370
Location
West Virginia
I've read about a third to half of this great thread and have gotten many good ideas. But I have not run across any solutions for pallet racking.
I've four "shops" totalling about 5,000 sq ft. About half of the walls are lined with pallet racking, total about 180 linear feet, ranging from 44" to 48" wide and 8' to 12' tall with from 3 to 5 shelf levels.

Half of these are set up so the first level is a comfortable working level with the first "shelf" layer being composed of either 2x4 or metal braces supporting 3/4 PT plywood with a 3/4" piece of MDF on top for a "sacrificial" work surface. Then levels above the work surface are just regular racking.

Thus, I've about 10 "worktables" which are 44" to 48" wide and 8' to 9' long. It's hard to reach the side that is up against the wall.

I've also a bunch of repurposed kitchen cabinets which I could fit on the back of the first shelf. I'd like to put the cabinets on the some sort of rollers so I could push them back against the wall, or pull them out when I need access.

Any suggestions for rollers? I'm thinking the cabinets will rarely weigh over 150lbs and "appliance rollers" will be my best bet.

You could get some unistrut and the trolley they sell and hang the cabinets from two sections of unistrut. That would let you pull the cabinet foreward and push it back, plus you could make the bottom of the cabinet higher than the work surface below it, potentially meaning you could pull the cabinets forward without disturbing what you were working on.

Could also use the hardware for hanging pocket doors, but I would think the unistrut and trolly would be a bit more durable.


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