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drawer liner

byrd

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Mar 6, 2008
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175
what is your prefered method of keeping your drawer liners in place?
 
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Fedwrench

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Dec 9, 2007
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Valley of the sun
If not the peel and stick drawer liner, a little dab of 3M weatherstrip cement (aka Gorillia snaught) in the corners and middle will do ya.
 

kyoung

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Jan 23, 2007
Messages
28
I use a brown shelf/drawer liner from Wal-Mart that is sticky/tacky enough that it will not move and holds tools really well. It's made out of cushion material with small holes in it. I believe it is around $4 a roll and will do multiple drawers.
 

Itzkwik

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Mar 19, 2006
Messages
539
Location
Montpelier, VA
Gotta put in a plug for the Harbor Freight $6/roll drawer liner. Stays in place in the drawers and the tools don't slide around. One of the things they haven't figured out how to screw up.
 

Theo

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Joined
Oct 8, 2007
Messages
475
Location
Oakville, On Canada
I use the non-slip drawer liner from Princess Auto. Sounds like the same stuff they sell @ HF. The only problem is it's tough/impossible to clean. All kinds of **** gets stuck in the holes. It's so cheap I'd probably just replace it after a while.
 

Merkava_4

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Joined
Dec 26, 2007
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Location
Clovis, CA.
If you have a good drawer liner, it will keep itself in place. Those Snap-on PVC coated fabric drawer liners are just flat out awesome.
 

Kevin54

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Joined
Jan 12, 2005
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Location
Urbana, Ohio
In one box I have the rubbery stuff that has the holes in it. Except I got mine at WallyWorld. Same as Kennedy and others sell but way cheaper. But what I like most and got for my other boxes is the cheap indoor/outdoor carpet that is gray. Usually get it at Lowes for around a buck or two a running foot by six foot wide. Cut to fit the drawers and nothing slides, plus it has little grooves in it to help keep some things in place.
 
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byrd

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Mar 6, 2008
Messages
175
ive had the rubber porous liners and they did stay in place but they are a pain to clean. the solid liners i got with my mac box will not stay in place. even in the drawers with the heaviest tools they slide when the drawers are shut. i suppose i could use some 3m trim adhesive, i think i got some in the garage.
 

Major Ramifications

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Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
4,673
Location
River Ridge, Louisiana
I've tried a couple of different "drawer liners" and I was not happy with either of them. I bought some dense nitrile sheet rubber, probably about 0.09" thick, which works great. It stays where I put it, dirt doesn't fall through the holes, tools don't stick to it or slide around. I was going to get it from a local rubber place but I found it much cheaper on ebay, even with shipping.
 

jamm

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Joined
Oct 31, 2007
Messages
139
In one box I have the rubbery stuff that has the holes in it. Except I got mine at WallyWorld. Same as Kennedy and others sell but way cheaper. But what I like most and got for my other boxes is the cheap indoor/outdoor carpet that is gray. Usually get it at Lowes for around a buck or two a running foot by six foot wide. Cut to fit the drawers and nothing slides, plus it has little grooves in it to help keep some things in place.


X 2 I like cheap carpet better than anything.
 

chavist93

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Joined
Mar 21, 2007
Messages
228
Location
North, SC
My Proto box came with some awsome liners. I wish I could find some more like them, but they are a shiny black material. The tools almost stick to it. You can slam the drawers and the tools dont move.
 

sharpe427

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 3, 2008
Messages
113
I use a brown shelf/drawer liner from Wal-Mart that is sticky/tacky enough that it will not move and holds tools really well. It's made out of cushion material with small holes in it. I believe it is around $4 a roll and will do multiple drawers.

Ditto! This stuff is the best I have ever found, and way cheaper than what the tool co's. seel labeled draw liner. It also works really well as a router mat for those of you into woodworking.
 

Major Ramifications

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Joined
Feb 28, 2005
Messages
4,673
Location
River Ridge, Louisiana
Spray Rhino liner in there for a liner??? Just thought about that.

Or how about some rubberized undercoating in the spray can? Has anyone tried this? Undercoating is cheap. I sprayed the overflow pan under the evaporator in the attic with the stuff. I doesn't eat up valuable drawer height much at all. I hadn't thought about using it as a drawer liner until I read Zeroek's quote up there.
 

NSXSOON

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Joined
Nov 15, 2005
Messages
221
Location
Florida Space Coast
I've tried a couple of different "drawer liners" and I was not happy with either of them. I bought some dense nitrile sheet rubber, probably about 0.09" thick, which works great. It stays where I put it, dirt doesn't fall through the holes, tools don't stick to it or slide around. I was going to get it from a local rubber place but I found it much cheaper on ebay, even with shipping.

Major

Do you have a pointer to a listing for the nitrile product you used?
 

dxdexter

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Joined
Aug 1, 2006
Messages
1,923
I use gravitational force. :)

It doesn't always work and the tools do cause the liners to move sometimes, but cleaning the drawers is much easier if you can remove the liners.
 

Kevin54

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Joined
Jan 12, 2005
Messages
29,341
Location
Urbana, Ohio
Originally Posted by kyoung
I use a brown shelf/drawer liner from Wal-Mart that is sticky/tacky enough that it will not move and holds tools really well. It's made out of cushion material with small holes in it. I believe it is around $4 a roll and will do multiple drawers.

That's what I have in my one box. It works very well. BUT...on certain tools, it will leave a stain. I have angle plates sitting on that type of mat in my machinist box at work and it has stained where they have been sitting. And being a ground almost polished surface, you can see every mark. Nothing I can't fix though. And you can slam a drawer shut and things stay.

If not the peel and stick drawer liner, a little dab of 3M weatherstrip cement (aka Gorillia snaught) in the corners and middle will do ya.

You might be better off getting some rubber cement from a school supply area of WallyWorld or Staples or Office Max. The rubber cement will peel right off if you change your liner, whereas the 3M gasket cement will tak a little scraping to get off. Just a suggestion.
 
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