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Cleaning up the mess...

djkeev

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OK, how many of you have containers of hardware?

You need a bolt or a nut so you dump it out, sort through it, find the item that you desire and now, you need to pick up the hundred pieces you don't want and put them back into the container.

I've held the container under the edge of the bench and carefully swept the pile back in and then picked up the 8 or 10 items that fell on the floor! Grrrrrrr! There has to be a better way!

Tonight I poured out a Baggie of VW parts to get a bolt and now was faced with returning the rest to the Baggie.......hmmmmm

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OK...... Wait! I'm a carpenter! I build buildings! ..... STEP FLASHING!.... Bend to 90 degrees.... Perfect! (I've also got coffee laced with Whiskey....)

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Scoop them up like a small dust pan....

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Slide them back into the Baggie using the 90 degree bend as a funnel...

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Viola'! Done, didn't drop one! :beer:

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Dave
 
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Ray-CA

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I turn a baggie inside-out, hold a magnet in my hand, put hand (with magnet) inside the inverted baggie. Run it through, over, around the parts. Turn baggie right side out, remove hand and magnet, seal baggie.

Ray
 

Zeke

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I always dump the contents of a bin out on an old towel or shop rag. It keeps the dust and debris when I grab the corners and pour the hardware back into the bin. I thought everyone did that.
 

JimVonBaden

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I always dump the contents of a bin out on an old towel or shop rag. It keeps the dust and debris when I grab the corners and pour the hardware back into the bin. I thought everyone did that.

I usually do. However, since I am starting fresh, I actually have spent the last few days sorting nuts/bolts and everything else to put in my parts bins. I labeled them tonight, but have a ways to go.

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It is about half full now.

I think I need another one!:lol_hitti

Jim :cool:
 

Dale B

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When you go to the swap meet , pick up a bunch of baking pans for $1 each , put the washers in one , nuts in another, etc , then they are laying in plain view for easy ID. Expand as neccessary It's worked for me since the pans used to cost 10 cents .......
 

NUTTSGT

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I usually do. However, since I am starting fresh, I actually have spent the last few days sorting nuts/bolts and everything else to put in my parts bins. I labeled them tonight, but have a ways to go.

Organizerpaint.jpg

03Organization10.jpg


It is about half full now.

I think I need another one!:lol_hitti

Jim :cool:

Will that shelf hold the weight of that cabinet full of fasteners ?
 

Murphy4570

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I have a couple small cardboard boxes full of hardware. Think the size of MAF sensor boxes.

Parting out cars means I have gobs of hardware lying around.
 

BJ42LX

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djkeev,

Put that hardware in a jar of Evaporust for a day or two. Rinse. Douse it with some WD40 and you'll have "new" hardware next time you go back to the bag for a piece of something.
 

gonefirefighting

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Surrounded by police in a hail of gunfire
just something to think about. I have a very large media tumbler in my shop just for those random piles of nuts, bolts and hardware. when I find all that stuff i dump it in the tumbler and let it ride. once it gets full i the pull out all the fresh looking goodies and sort accordingly.
 

JimVonBaden

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Kevin54

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Look into one of the small vibrating tumblers and toss those rusty nuts and bolts in it to clean them up before storing them back to a container. Myself, I hardly keep rusted nuts and bolts. As cheap as they are, I run to the hardware store and pick up some new ones.

http://www.harborfreight.com/garage-shop/tumblers-vibrators/5-lb-metal-********-tumbler-67617.html

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Falcon67

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Coffee cans. Why sort - it's more fun to dig through a big pile of bolts on the bench top, looking for the perfect one.
 

Stick Figure

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Outlawmws

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Outlawmws

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No mess to start with....

http://www.harborfreight.com/24-divider-storage-container-94458.html

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Just have a stack of these boxes, I can easily peek in the top to see everything. I prefer it to a bin system because I can see everything alot easier!

I use those for my smallish parts and elextrical, but they are not really good for larger bolts, nails and brackets kinds of storage.

Jim :cool:

THIS ^^^^

A couple for the small quantity speed and screw gun specialty fasteners, (bulk stay in original boxes) and 5 for crimp on electrical connectors; one setup as a "road box" for electrical with basics and a crimper tool; One with brass pipe fittings and one oversize one for my limited supply of metric fasteners.

I couldn't fit all my nuts and bolts in those even if I filled an office supply cabinet completely with the plastic bins, and if I did it would collapse, unless I got the ones Jack uses...
 
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djkeev

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I was simply posting an idea of how to return the items to the container. The thread has taken a few good turns though.

I clean my hardware as I need it. It's a lot of time to have everything in storage clean, nice I'm sure but a lot of time.

Just buy new hardware!?!? You're kidding right? Most of the hardware that you find on shelves today is quite simply sub standard low grade garbage from China. To get quality hardware you need to shop somewhere other than Home Depot or Lowes. An outfit like Graingers or Fastenal for sure. It won't be "cheap" but it will be quality and quality that is backed up by documentation of origin, many industries require this for safety (such as the amusement industry).

I reuse most of my old hardware except where fastener stretch is critical, such as torque angle head bolts.

Storage, there are a lot of really bad systems on the market. The open bins do nothing but collect dirt and debris. The drawers make items hard to locate. Many parts trays are not spill proof though if you keep them in a drawer all will be well. Portable compartment organizers are by my standards poorly made, tend to crack and actually fail to keep item A in item A's box and they end up in item E's box!

This is what I use, there are larger ones but this one is absolutely ideal for all of those little parts You have in limited quantities. The cover is clear so you can see without opening the box, each tray is separate and removable so you can take the tray of screws to the spot you are working without lugging the whole case with you!

A little spendy? Yes, they are. But if you want quality, it isn't the cheapest available most of the time.

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Open with some trays removed....

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Dave
 
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djkeev

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The shop I used to work at had these metal drawers similar to the Stanley you have. They were filled by the vendors with specialty fasteners and small parts. They outlasted me on the job. Hard to find used but you can buy new for about 20 bucks a box.


Yes, I've got a number of these boxes. Problem is, not spill proof, excellent for a drawer setup but not good for carrying around in a briefcase like fashion.

The trouble with my favored Stanley box is that they air difficult to find in stores.
Sears sells a similar unit, not as good, Harbor Freight sells a similar box, again, not as good.

These are way cheaper than Stanley's but the reason why is obvious once you begin to use them.

Here are the Sears (bottom/red) and the HF boxes.

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Dave
 
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sxk122

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I don't have anywhere near the amount of random hardware y'all have. lol.

I have 5 of the $3.99 HF boxes, and they fit most of my random stuff. The reason I prefer them is the dividers remove, so you can store long bolts. As for quantity, if i have more than would fit in the box, it generally means I bought a box of said object, so i just store it in those boxes....
 
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djkeev

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I don't have anywhere near the amount of random hardware y'all have. lol.

I have 5 of the $3.99 HF boxes, and they fit most of my random stuff. The reason I prefer them is the dividers remove, so you can store long bolts. As for quantity, if i have more than would fit in the box, it generally means I bought a box of said object, so i just store it in those boxes....


Oh you must be young! The disease will grab you sooner or later!
The need to keep that odd Metric bolt for SOMEDAY (probably after I'm dead and buried) it MAY be needed! :)

I've got boxes and boxes of not only hardware new and old but plastic bits, rubber bits, special automotive hardware and automotive clips. I've got boxes of woodruff keys, cotter pins, grease fittings, snap rings.......... Sigh!

Why? The day of the local small town hardware store that had all of this stuff in stock is gone. You need a woodruff key today where I live, it's a half hour round trip to a place that might maybe have one that I can modify and make fit, if they dont have it then with a two hour round trip I can probably have it in my hands but then again.......maybe not.

Dave
 

1949 caddyman

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Arizona
I dump out can of hardware on to 4-5 sheets of newspaper. Find what you want, fold newspaper in half and use it to pour parts back into container.
 

sxk122

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Oh you must be young! The disease will grab you sooner or later!
Dave


29, and my parent's and my parents never get rid of anything.... and lord forbid if it has a sale sign on it......

I have a tendency to go in the other direction.
 

bb1970

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Dec 22, 2008
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Buckner MO.
You guys with yer fancy pants organization skills are taking the sport out of tinkering on things!:bounce:
 
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