vettracer85
Member
- Joined
- May 18, 2014
- Messages
- 17


you guys that have them stored vertically - how can you tell them apart? I have mine on those metal rails you get from SO stored horizontally. Takes a lot more space, but you can tell immediately what the socket is (deep, semi-deep, standard), metric or fractional and its size.
you can see the numbers on the rails. May sound a little crazy but you look up and down with your eyes and do not have to move your head left to right; when you are looking for a socket. I learned this trick as a surgical technologist and i just added this to the collision as my second job. Every seconds counts in the O.R. and your neck will thank you.you guys that have them stored vertically - how can you tell them apart? I have mine on those metal rails you get from SO stored horizontally. Takes a lot more space, but you can tell immediately what the socket is (deep, semi-deep, standard), metric or fractional and its size.


Mine is stuffed full, but organized.
Chromes are all SnapOn, but impacts are all Sunex.

Curious about why people keep sockets and ratchets in separate drawers? To me it makes more sense to have a drawer for a drive size, with ratchets, sockets and extensions in that drawer, and a different drawer for a different size.

you guys that have them stored vertically - how can you tell them apart? I have mine on those metal rails you get from SO stored horizontally. Takes a lot more space, but you can tell immediately what the socket is (deep, semi-deep, standard), metric or fractional and its size.


You see, my tools don't get along too well.
One day the hex metric sockets started a rebellion in my socked drawer. They claimed they deserved better living quarters than the rest because they did most of the work while the rest spent their days sleeping. So with great effort they drove the SAE sockets downstairs, to a small drawer close to the basement. A bit racist if you ask me but the metrics got a point - the SAE sleep most days and only have to work few days per year.
Few days later this happened again, now against the 12 point royalty. It was sent from the prime realestate in the big socket drawer to a different one, smaller less accessible. Same reasons again. Then the hex metric workhorses got bored and insisted company of like minded tools. Ratchets, extensions etc. Now the former socket drawer if brim full of the self proclaimed workhorses and form an elite team so I can do majority of my work from that single drawer instead of shifting constantly between many to fetch the same tools again and again all day long.
My SAE wrenches and hex keys also lost ground and after some walkabout they finally found rest in the small drawer with the SAE sockets. Cramped together with little air!
So now I don't have a dedicated socket drawer! Turned out it was a mistake from work-flow point of view, I like this system much better -- long live the rebellion!

Box in Car Shop. Metric and SAE Impacts in foreground and Chrome are SAE
....
There should be a Tool Box Organization Sticky created...
Some of my extra ratchets
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