To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Anyone ever see a toolbox collapse from too much weight?

KnurledNut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
8,138
Location
n/a
Ive seen drawers fail, but anyone know of casters giving out and a whole box falling over, etc?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

redwrench60

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 10, 2011
Messages
6,069
Location
East Tennessee
A co workers HF 44” box had the castors tread crumble apart and make the box tippy. He had to replace all the wheels on that box.
I had a drawer slide break on an older Craftsman box along with a couple failed spot welds. More recently my newer HF 44” box had a slide fail. It came apart internally and locked up. I’ve worked with some mechanics with boxes in pretty sad shape.
 

Bogie1632

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2018
Messages
1,303
Location
Southeastern Wisconsin
I've seen a couple stacked models tip over when a caster failed. In a typical USAF vehicle maintenance shop the boxes get moved a lot. Not many technicians have a designated work spot where the box gets parked for years. The only ones I've seen fail were from non-suspension (cheapo stamped casters like you see on older CM or HF style boxes) boxes, loaded too top heavy, moving, and catching a crack or hitting an object just right. Even better when the box isn't locked so the drawers start sliding out on the way over and get f'd up too. A couple single rollers have also had casters fall apart in similar fashion, but not tip over...mainly because they're too deep, too close to the floor, and not enough mass to keep them tipping.

Edit: I should also mention many shops back in the day had 25" CM triple stacks. They were not the most stable boxes to begin with, let alone drag all over a shop day in day out.

I also saw many boxes tipped over, backed in to, and smashed by careless knuckleheads over the years. I don't have the pic anymore, but one shop a friend was assigned at had a toolbox speared by a hydraulic ram.

V/R
Bogie
 

vwpieces

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 28, 2020
Messages
5,925
Location
Hills, PA
Visited a buddy last year and asked him why the bottle Jack was under the front of his huge SO box.
I was laughing too hard to remember the fine details but synopsis is that something broke, drawers started rolling open one by one till it just tipped over.
Pics were priceless...
Think it was a combination of floor not flat against the wall he recently moved it to, bad wheel load spring and possibly broken or disabled drawer catches.
Think only a couple slides were injured, box looked fine and no tools broken.
 

DAustin

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2021
Messages
5,164
I had a big plastic rubber maid tool box and I went to pick it up and the handle came off and the box stayed on the ground. It was my junk yard box and it "may have had" a few things in it besides tools :)
 

unslow1

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 3, 2012
Messages
7,880
Location
Illinois
I've see a couple tip over from guys opening too many loaded drawers at the same time. Mine has even tried to do that but I was able to shove a drawer closed.
 

Al Borland

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 20, 2016
Messages
1,598
I didn't get to see the failure happen, but I saw the aftermath. My old Matco box tipped forward after the wheel mounting area rusted thru and the wheel collapsed. 2:00-2:30 in the morning and it set off the alarm in the shop. The box had sat in the same spot, in the same damp shop for about 30 years and wasn't new when it went there. Top chest flew off and blew apart/open and shot sockets and wrenches everywhere. The lower was full of stuff like chainfalls, come-alongs and clamps. The box/stack was one size lager than a 26", maybe 32-34" and about 5 1/2 feet tall.
On closer examination, it appears that the interior of the caster mount wasn't accessable to paint, and the shop was marginally heated. Condensation and time ate it away.
 
OP
K

KnurledNut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
8,138
Location
n/a
Yes, a machinist bottom kennedy, the owner had probably 800 lbs of steel and brass offcuts in the bottom 3 drawers.
I started this thread -in part- because of this very same box!
I recently passed on buying one because the casters were not very convincing. (And the key was missing.) It was hard to pass up otherwise, as it was a great deal.

Edit: Hey Firebrick, he didnt happen to sell this box recently, did he???
:lol_hitti
 
OP
K

KnurledNut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
8,138
Location
n/a
I was in Horrible Fright one day & a guy coming towards me had his entire shopping cart collapse. I mentioned that they probably bought the shopping carts of Horrible Fright....
What on earth?!
:wtf:
 

Firebrick43

Well-known member
Joined
May 12, 2015
Messages
14,037
Location
West central Indiana
I started this thread -in part- because of this very same box!
I recently passed on buying one because the casters were not very convincing. (And the key was missing.) It was hard to pass up otherwise, as it was a great deal.

Edit: Hey Firebrick, he didnt happen to sell this box recently, did he???
:lol_hitti
No it was years ago, pretty sure its now resides in a chinese ratchet or something
 

2ndGearRubber

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 24, 2014
Messages
14,185
Location
Pittsburgh
Casters crushing into the base of cheap metal carts isnt uncommon. The metal of the cart is 20% as thick as the caster flange, so it isnt surprising. Tipping of.entire boxes is a use issue, too many drawers open vs the total weight of the contents. Add unstable base, improper drawer opening, and one can dump a box.

I see them dumped most often when moving. Drawers arent locked, one drawer swings open, unsettles the chassis, which allows either enough shell flex or vibration to let another drawer open, and so on. In my opinion, heavily loaded boxes should have something like a 2x4 ratchet strapped in front of the drawers to prevent opening in the event of latch or locking mechanism failure when moving. Just pushing around the shop isnt a big deal, but if one is moving a loaded box on ramps and similar it doesnt hurt to have insurance.


I have seen multiple drawer failures causing a domino effect. Mostly on overloaded cheap boxes, they sag severely, interfering with lower drawers, spots welds and slides fatigue, etc.

All the exciting stuff seems to happen when moving them.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

2ndGearRubber

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 24, 2014
Messages
14,185
Location
Pittsburgh
jack or well cut 2x4s under that drawer that we cant see? Or do you weight under a buck fifty?

Nah, those boxes can just do that. Wouldn't bounce on it. I've stood in my single drawer slide drawers. There's not crazy weight in that drawer, from what is visible. I keep all my bearing races in a 5 gallon bucket next to the press.
 

Sumboodie

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2021
Messages
10,693
Location
AK
I was in Horrible Fright one day & a guy coming towards me had his entire shopping cart collapse. I mentioned that they probably bought the shopping carts of Horrible Fright....
I had a Lowes plastic cart blow through with 800lbs of concrete.

They didn't have the metal trolley carts available and refused to help me.
 

seber

Well-known member
Joined
May 31, 2016
Messages
4,196
Location
Deep East Tx.
It hasn't happened to me but I've bought and sold a whole lot of Kennedy boxes that had collapsed bottoms from too much weight. I always add a plate or 3/4 plywood and new casters before I sell them. My welding cart is a Red Kennedy mechanics box with 1/4" plate reinforcement. My rope and chain box is a Kennnedy machinist box with 3/4" plywood. However, it does have the original casters. Both of them were super cheap because they had collapsed.
 

CS454

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 10, 2014
Messages
668
I have a JET Brand box which amuses me, haven't seen another in the wild in the 10 years I've owned it. Bought it warehouse direct scratch and dent due to a primo forklift operator.

My 1-5/16" - 2" Sunex Combi/Angle head wrenches, and my SO 1" - 1-1/2" wrenches all live in one drawer with single friction slides. Pulls in and out without racking, box locks and unlocks without drama.

The frame is cooked from the cabinet falling over in my truck moving it, and it measures out of square...but it's paid for. :ROFLMAO:
 

boom10ful

Well-known member
Joined
May 15, 2020
Messages
128
Location
United States
Ive seen drawers fail, but anyone know of casters giving out and a whole box falling over, etc?
My US General 5 drawer cart has bent at the caster mounting points and is starting to tear in that area. It's very overloaded so that's my fault. I think it would have done better had it spring loaded casters.
 

Downwindtracker 2

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 13, 2019
Messages
1,715
Location
BC
The mill I worked in had very uneven floor. The machines were on concrete, but between the old machines, they had merely blacktopped. Unless you put a real cart with 8" casters under them, the tool boxes lasted only a few months. Even so, with all the twisting, a couple of my boxes broke the corners. Company replaced them. Most often the tool boxes rode around on the forks of one of the maintenance forklifts. A few were spilled. Those ball bearing slides are very repairable.
 

nadogail

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 23, 2009
Messages
31,956
Location
Coronado, CA
I have had a Craftsman dump over while moving it from the alley across the joint in the slab and up the ramp into a garage.
 

Bogie1632

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 18, 2018
Messages
1,303
Location
Southeastern Wisconsin
Tipping a toolbox over is only a fail if you arent able to get the tool you were originally after.


Looks like a problem for later. Haha.

30,000 caster fail. "Oh no, oh no, oh no no no no no..." :ROFLMAO:

I had an Airman pulling a triple stack CM box out of our shop using a rope. Just outside the door I watched it tip just like the video. Missed my Silverado by about an inch. Never parked my truck near the doors again.

V/R
Bogie
 

Fatboy148

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 15, 2017
Messages
999
I came close to tipping my Williams roll box when I was initially filling it. I wasn't paying quite enough attention and started to open the top drawer with one already opened just below it. I felt it starting to tip and luckily I was able to slide the drawer back that I had started to open. It was close though.

As far as a structural collapse. Not that I have one or six BUT... Lets try this short video:

 

Junkdrawer Dog

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 14, 2019
Messages
1,460
Location
LV NV
I2've seen a couple stacked models tip over when a caster failed. In a typical USAF vehicle maintenance shop the boxes get moved a lot. Not many technicians have a designated work spot where the box gets parked for years. The only ones I've seen fail were from non-suspension (cheapo stamped casters like you see on older CM or HF style boxes) boxes, loaded too top heavy, moving, and catching a crack or hitting an object just right. Even better when the box isn't locked so the drawers start sliding out on the way over and get f'd up too. A couple single rollers have also had casters fall apart in similar fashion, but not tip over...mainly because they're too deep, too close to the floor, and not enough mass to keep them tipping.

Edit: I should also mention many shops back in the day had 25" CM triple stacks. They were not the most stable boxes to begin with, let alone drag all over a shop day in day out.

I also saw many boxes tipped over, backed in to, and smashed by careless knuckleheads over the years. I don't have the pic anymore, but one shop a friend was assigned at had a toolbox speared by a hydraulic ram.

V/R
Bogie

I've seen a couple stacked models tip over

I've seen a couple stacked models tip over
 

RTM

Well-known member
Joined
May 13, 2019
Messages
13,164
Location
SF Bay Area
I've seen many rusted out hulks that used to be tool boxes, casters poking into their bottom section, but never one collapse in active use.
 

Ricky Joe

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 15, 2013
Messages
2,452
Location
Roanoke, Va.
Back in the early 1980s I worked at a garage that had two levels. When you had to change levels they moved your box with a forklift. I had a Snap-On Taco box with a top box. It slid off of the forks to the side, balanced for a second, came down on the wheels, spun 180 degrees, and rolled down the hill square into the grill of a Freightliner. It racked the top box and severely damaged the bottom box. The company bought me another box.
 

ArcReactorKC

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 1, 2019
Messages
2,237
Location
Out in the county NE of KCMO
Working industrial maintenance I bought a stainless husky box. The one with 5 drawers and the side door cabinet. I don't recall what it was rated for but after putting all of my 3/4 drive stuff in it you could tell it was crying. A month later after being pushed around the shop on of the rotating casters gave up the ghost. It's now in my garage with some industrial casters on it. Still crying from being full of tools but it's still much less weight. To be fair to the box I am 100% certain nobody at the home depot thought a 5" 3/4 drive socket was going to grace the drawers of this box, much less fill the box with those size of tools.
 
OP
K

KnurledNut

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 28, 2011
Messages
8,138
Location
n/a
Back in the early 1980s I worked at a garage that had two levels. When you had to change levels they moved your box with a forklift. I had a Snap-On Taco box with a top box. It slid off of the forks to the side, balanced for a second, came down on the wheels, spun 180 degrees, and rolled down the hill square into the grill of a Freightliner. It racked the top box and severely damaged the bottom box. The company bought me another box.

Ouch! What was the replacement box?

Working industrial maintenance I bought a stainless husky box. The one with 5 drawers and the side door cabinet. I don't recall what it was rated for but after putting all of my 3/4 drive stuff in it you could tell it was crying. A month later after being pushed around the shop on of the rotating casters gave up the ghost. It's now in my garage with some industrial casters on it. Still crying from being full of tools but it's still much less weight. To be fair to the box I am 100% certain nobody at the home depot thought a 5" 3/4 drive socket was going to grace the drawers of this box, much less fill the box with those size of tools.

How did the drawer slides hold up? Ball bearing i assume?
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom