To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Alternative tool drawer lining?

drummerdimitri

Well-known member
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
257
Location
Beirut, Lebanon
So like most of us here, I don't buy sets of tools that come in their own custom foam pad where they conveniently slot back in so they always stay in place when the drawers are opened/closed multiple times.

The current lining of my drawers is a foam pad about 3 mm thick. It does a good job of keeping the tools scratch free and all but unless I close and open the tool drawers at a sluggish pace, they start moving out of their original position rather quickly and it just looks like a cluttered mess!

What other lining could I use that has a much higher coefficient of static friction (stickier) so that the tools stay in place with normal opening/closing speed?

I was thinking something like one of those phone pads that one places on their car's dashboard would be great but I doubt I would find it in sizes large enough to fit the drawers.

Anyone else tackled this issue with resounding success?
 
Last edited:
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

bonneyman

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 22, 2010
Messages
8,857
Location
Desert SW
There's a thread somewhere that shows a guy who took thick insulated copper wire wrapped around a dowel and then attached inside the drawer. One can slide wrenches, screwdrivers, etc. into the slots made to hold the tools. Plus one can flatten the wire to fit thinner drawers.
Did it to a toolbox at work and it performed well. But nobody would take the time to put the tools back properly so within a week or two the drawers were all screwed up again.

For sockets something like the Hansen or Eastwood racks work well. If that idea could be modified for wrench and ratchet use then so much the better.

FWIW
 
OP
D

drummerdimitri

Well-known member
Joined
May 31, 2012
Messages
257
Location
Beirut, Lebanon
I just remembered having bought a piece of kitchen drawer lining for an old project and decided to cut a piece to fit one of my drawers to test it out and lo and behold, it works amazingly well!

It is made of some kind of rubber that is smooth at the bottom but slightly ribbed on top so that's what makes it grip to the tools so well and doesn't let them slide around inside the drawer.

Need to buy me some more of them but the challenge now is how to get the perfect cut. I don't have a large cutting mat and I'm afraid of using a cutter on such thick material (1.5 mm) as I've had a bad experience with a cutter blade in the past.

I'm sure the company that sells them also cuts them to fit their customer's kitchen drawers so will give them the interior dimensions and have them cut it for me.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

MushCreek

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 14, 2015
Messages
9,829
Location
Upstate South Carolina
Most drawer liners are too thin, that's why they bunch up. I've always used indoor-outdoor carpet. The big box stores sell gray stuff with ribs. I run it so the ribs run crossways to help hold stuff in place. In my trade as a toolmaker, I have a lot of very heavy tooling, and have yet to find a drawer liner that works as well as the carpet.
 

csp

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 23, 2010
Messages
5,720
Location
Franktown, CO
I've used yoga mats and just picked up a new treadmill mat from an auction to try it out as drawer liners. The only downside to it I see is it's about 3/16" thick. For $5 no big deal if it doesn't work.
 

Steve_P

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2010
Messages
5,188
Another vote for yoga mats. I bought a huge roll online and no issues after 10+ years
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom