Here's the socket boss from Ernst manufacturing.....
Set it up anyway you want to....
I don't understand drawers like this. Are their duplicates in here? I'm guessing it is SAE and mm. But it looks like multiple sets of 3/8" shallow, in addition to the 6pt and 12pt.
Gotta tell ya, I have a lot of sockets, and my set looks nothing like this. What I see here is the same socket over and over again like some sort of collection.
I have (excluding impacts)
1/2dr 12pt shallows (for 12 pt fastener on some cars brakes)
3/8"dr 6pt deep, shallow
1/4"dr 6pt semi deep, and shallow
That's it for regular socket sets,
Then I have 3/8" swivels
a 3/8 low pro set
torx, swivel torx
triple square, stubby triple square
several sets of allen, long short, ball ends
That drawer also holds all my extensions, and ratchets
Most if not all of the specialty stuff is stored in the Snap On flat trays it came in. My sockets are in MTS caddies (which I don't love).
My advice for folks looking to organize their sockets is to start by culling the herd. Just because craftsman makes it, doesn't mean you need it. One thing I like (because I feel it makes me a faster and better mechanic) is to have the storage marked with the size. My basic hex sockets don't have that today and I'd like something for that.
I wholeheartedly agree with the OP- the spring clip socket rails are bogus. The plastic stud ones are nicer. But I still don't like rail type. What I would like is for someone like Westling to make a better version of the MTS Magna caddy, sized and labeled for SO sockets, milled out of a hunk of plastic, with sizes either as stuck on labels or CNC'd into the plastic.