What does everyone do with their extra sockets? Over the years lots of double triples and what not from various cheap sets and some random quality ones. Hate to just toss them but they literally sit in an ammo can and never get touched
I have quite a few of 9mm, 11mm, 5.5mm and other odd balls I don't know what to do with.
I am heading down the same road as you. No longer holding on to stuff I haven't used in over a year. Junked an old Dremel oscillating tool that that batteries would literally last 3 mins on high speed. I have the kobalt 24v oscillating tool so no need to keep that other around. Anything usable will get donated if the thrift stores open soon otherwise off to the landfill. I've been getting rid of all the extra hardware that comes with everything. Keeping the drywall anchors n common screws of course. The odd ball screws and various buts n pieces are all going out. Had a bunch of torx lags from a pergola we bought from Sam's a few years ago. We sold that home and no longer have a pergola, can't see any reason to hold on to them. Especially with the hardware stores within 5 mins from my home. Slowly working on getting a quality version of my freebies and hand-me-downs. I'm pretty invested into the kobalt 24v line so I'll continue it. One of my local stores has the kobalt jobsite fan discounted to $50 and am tempted to get it, even tho I really can't justify it other than it's a good deal. I do need an angle grinder and jigsaw. Pry gonna go with a corded grinder vs battery just because those seem to eat batteries no matter what brandIt's amazing liberating to get rid of extra stuff. That's becoming more and more important to me the past year or two.
Today I got rid of my big welder. I lost a lot of capability because of that. I can no longer effectively weld cracked aluminum bell housings and stuff like that. So what? I haven't done that in years. I now have a small, portable Lincoln square wave 200 multi-process that does essentially everything that I have done for the past 20 years. Anything beyond it's capability I can hire done. It takes up less than 1/4 of the space, and can be moved about readily.
I couldn't believe how good it felt to load up that 650 pound welder, and walk back into the garage and have that empty place to do something else with.
Same with the sockets. I've sold about 120 of them this week. 5 craftsman sets, 3 snap-on, and 2 proto. Immediately listed back essentially identical sets to start the next round of disposal. The drawers full of extras keep getting less full all the time. I'm looking forward to when I'm down to the dregs, and I throw them in a box and start the lot at 99 cents on ebay and they go down the road.
I'm putting drywall on the back wall, corner and ceiling of my garage at the moment. When I get the back 6 foot done, I'm installing three new 46" rolling boxes with 12 feet of workbench on top of them against that back wall. The stuff that those will hold will free enough floor space to continue along one wall and doing the ceiling. Each finished piece allows me to get closer to the final product, which will be a clear, sealed, warm garage to park in, with everything that I choose to keep organized in easy to access storage.
It all starts by getting rid of one extra piece of clutter at a time. Even if that's just a few cheap sockets.
I did consider doing a donation but here where I am all the locations are closed. I need to get the garage cleaned out so I can bring my car in until I can get it to the speed shop
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What does everyone do with their extra sockets?
It's not just the ammo can of sockets, it's the whole facet of the keeping junk that you can't use or need.
Why would you buy socket racks, spend the time sorting and organizing, dedicate space to storing them, and then take the time to give them away later? Time and space are limitations on our lives. Anything we can do to save those things improves the quality of our lives. Hoarding cheap sockets that we have no use for, degrades the quality of life, not improves it.
The same rationalization can be made for drywall scrap pieces, leftover screws and washers and hardware extras from things you bought years ago, old ice cream buckets, odd bits of string, and even old newspapers or used bolts or nails.
If it bothers you to throw them away in the scrap metal, put the scrap metal bucket out at the curb with a free sign on it and let the scavengers have at it.
It's really hard to break out of the poverty mentality and hoarding mindset. Everything is valuable for "someday". I might break or lose all my stuff, and then I'll use this garbage that I don't want now, so I'll save it. I might be so poor someday that a discarded socket will be precious to me when I can't afford to replace the one I break. Is that really how you want to think? Do you really believe your circumstances will be like that? I know I've had a hard time breaking out of that mode. But, I regret none of the stuff I've gotten rid of over the past 5 years. Not even the stuff that's been thrown into the trash or the scrap metal. And, I really, really like working in the space in my shop and garage that's not cluttered up with stuff I have to move to do anything.
You ever need the one that's right at the bottom?[emoji16]i got a five gallon bucket full
Anyone else have some solutions to the pass through sockets? I guess a magnetic holder would work too, hmmm


surely an ammo can of sockets is not going to interfere with that.

I try to make complete ish sets and put them in vehicles at the least. But I drive an 18 year old Diesel and a 30 year old truck so maybe a little more mandatory to carry tools lol.
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OK, I give up, what are you going to do with your lists?
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