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I hate socket organizers.

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ihateminimumwage

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 26, 2012
Messages
3,960
I know the feeling :lol:

So Far I have both my 1/4" holders full, and my 3/8" metric. Half way for my 3/8" SAE and both my 1/2". It's a process, especially filling in those misc sizes... They do look damn nice when they're filled in though.:thumbup:
 

Rico.

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2009
Messages
1,330
Location
England
Snaponicus Verse 1 Chapter 3

and he who uses socket rails shall be most content, for he doth not know what he misses.
 

Bull

Super Moderator
Joined
Dec 12, 2005
Messages
16,189
Location
MA
Westling Machine organizers are of amazing quality and allow you to worry about organizing what you have, not obsessing over what you don't have.

Just another option.
 

senor fozz

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 29, 2013
Messages
543
I don't use rails.

I like the way you work sir. I just don't get why people get so bent out of shape about having their organizers filled completely. I'm glad when I don't get 9 and 20 mm in sets. To each his own.
 

Letsgobowhunting

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2013
Messages
210
Location
Village of Clinton, N.E. Ohio
I bought the HF to save $50. I really like them but I also realize they have so many open spots. One thing I really was suprised by is how huch more space these trays take up. It takes twice the space that my raid used to.
 

Rico.

Well-known member
Joined
May 28, 2009
Messages
1,330
Location
England
I don't use rails.

sberry.... I swear I mean this with the greatest of affection, but I would bet
you make your own lampshades out of used pineapples and that your
mobile phone has a giant valve sticking out the top of it.

:beer:
 

Gregg33

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 13, 2011
Messages
777
Location
Port Colborne, ON, Canada
Get a refund on the hansens, buy rails. If you must have a tray set up, buy the westling machine racks or get this ernst model.

http://www.ernstmfg.com/tool-organi...ail-universal-twist-lock-socket-tray-393.html

The money you save by not hunting down socket sizes you'll never use, combined with the piece of mind that comes from not staring at an empty peg is priceless.:beer:

Rails are much better imo, less wasted space, more portable and you can set them up the way you want. For plastic the Ernst, Craftsman, now defunct Kobalt or even Taiwan made ones work good. The steel (sheet metal stamped) SO ones offer a good bang for the buck. The plastic ones will stand on their own, the SO metal ones will with all but the biggest sockets, other brands of metal rails (like some I bought from Gray) have a more rounded bottom and will lean or will fall over, if you don't fasten them to your box or lay them down. Another benefit of the rails is you can swap the clips if they break or even mix drive sizes. That isn't possible with racks, not to mention some sockets (especially older ones) won't go over the pegs on the racks.
 
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jakemac

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Joined
May 21, 2013
Messages
9,035
Location
New England
No kidding. I own sockets now I'm sure I will never use and I have them in deep and short.


Only deep and short ? What about 6pt, 8pt, 12pt ? Do you have any Whitworths ? How about the old USS standard ? How about mid length ?

It never ends. You will never have enough. Welcome to the nightmare. :D
 
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BK13

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 1, 2013
Messages
2,692
Location
PDX, OR
OCD strikes again...

No kidding. I was just about done with filling my 1/2" drive SAE set when I realized that Kobalt doesn't make 3/8" deep impact, so now I obsess over the ONE Armstrong socket on there.

Plus, what do you with semi-deeps?
 

Rickster

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 26, 2005
Messages
6,218
Location
SE PA
I yanked my Hansen's out, got tired of having open pegs, sockets I'd never use and no room for doubles of sockets I'd use often. I've been picking up those red magnetic trays at garage sales for a while now and I switched over to them. So far it's working out pretty good. I have an older toolbox so the top drawer is shorter in height and the trays are a perfect fit after cutting off the handles.
 

jjjrmx5

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
3,431
Location
Cincinnati, OH
Snaponicus Verse 1 Chapter 3

and he who uses socket rails shall be most content, for he doth not know what he misses.

LOLOLOLZZZZZZZZZ!!!

Rico doth speaketh the truth.
And it is that truth that I too live by.

Lest not let those that forge and cast the tools of the trades set the standards by which ye shall organize, but be a man of virture and good standing and set your own.

And above all, doth always remember...that thine 15mm 1/4" drive socket is , and will always be, a crafty and elusive ***** to wrangle.

Hahahahahahaha!!!!!!!
:lol:
 

GIJoe4500

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2012
Messages
197
Location
San Antonio, TX
LOLOLOLZZZZZZZZZ!!!

Rico doth speaketh the truth.
And it is that truth that I too live by.

Lest not let those that forge and cast the tools of the trades set the standards by which ye shall organize, but be a man of virture and good standing and set your own.

And above all, doth always remember...that thine 15mm 1/4" drive socket is , and will always be, a crafty and elusive ***** to wrangle.

Hahahahahahaha!!!!!!!
:lol:

I have ONE 15mm 1/4" drive socket (shallow 12pt). Need 3 more to fill my rails (shallow 6pt, deep 6pt, and deep 12pt)
 

jjjrmx5

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 30, 2010
Messages
3,431
Location
Cincinnati, OH
I have ONE 15mm 1/4" drive socket (shallow 12pt). Need 3 more to fill my rails (shallow 6pt, deep 6pt, and deep 12pt)

Napa/Carlyse sells the 1/4" 15mm in short and long 6 point. Not a hateful price. I have them.
Snap-On does the 6 points in long and short in 15mm.

Finding 1/4" drive 12 points is near impossible anymore.

I have sets of C'man in 12 point 1/4" from back in the 80's and 70's but everyone went 6 point around 2000 IIRC.
Not common at all any more.
 

sberry

Banned
Joined
Jun 18, 2005
Messages
35,747
Location
Brethren, Michigan
I am working in a different environment than many which changes a few things. I provide all the tooling no matter what we are doing and no locked boxes as well as significant walking. As simple as it seems it took me a long time to get squared around and a lot of my stuff is duplication. I envision some kind of stacked rail, the turnstyle is it feeds 2 bays.

My other cart is with its back to the wall so the turn wouldn't be an advantage but was thinking of stepped rails by size. I kind 0f gave up and might tinker a bit but simply moved a lot of stuff I really didn't use to a drawer.
 

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sberry

Banned
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Jun 18, 2005
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Brethren, Michigan
I probably don't have a new pic but have an older one and dam near stripped a 5 gallon bucket of stuff off the top I really didn't use. When I get rich would splurge for the HF with 2 sets of small drawers where I could use the top like this in the same fashion, I don't need it to be a work bench and I don't really move it.

As I recall may have even removed some more to the bottom, I rarely use chrome sockets. walked for a couple on the last job but all this beats a lot of tedious organization.

I like the stuff I use handy and if I got to look for something tossed in a drawer on occasion so be it, I use a metric wrench from this location once a week,,, ha and 95% of it is 1/2 impact or common China end wrench although I got a few better ones tossed in the drawer should a guy really need a 6 pt etc.

The old cart in the pic has a few metric end wrenches, most of the drive stuff, extensions, ratchets and some real general tools. Its home is near the hoist bay, most metrics we do are found on cars.
 

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sberry

Banned
Joined
Jun 18, 2005
Messages
35,747
Location
Brethren, Michigan
As someone said, a 9MM I can pretty much do without and it came in every set. I got that **** tossed in a drawer out of the way.
 

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sberry

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Jun 18, 2005
Messages
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Location
Brethren, Michigan
I got a hand full of stuff out then kept putting it all on this bench cart, gonna wheel it all in at once. We must have had another dozen various pieces, it adds up fast and I was busy this week.
 

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sberry

Banned
Joined
Jun 18, 2005
Messages
35,747
Location
Brethren, Michigan
I don't need every one they ever invented. I wouldn't mind a couple of mid length, mainly a 9/16 but its not a deal breaker. Even though I have then all about the only 7 I have ever used is an open end on a golf cart.
 

GIJoe4500

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2012
Messages
197
Location
San Antonio, TX
Napa/Carlyse sells the 1/4" 15mm in short and long 6 point. Not a hateful price. I have them.
Snap-On does the 6 points in long and short in 15mm.

Finding 1/4" drive 12 points is near impossible anymore.

I have sets of C'man in 12 point 1/4" from back in the 80's and 70's but everyone went 6 point around 2000 IIRC.
Not common at all any more.

I have almost a full set of shallow Proto fractional 12pt in 1/4" drive. not sure what year they are from, got them at a pawn shop for $0.25/ea. In deep, i have a single snap-on 12pt that I got at the same time, it was also a quarter.
 

rusty65

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 20, 2012
Messages
2,279
Location
Pekin,IL
I love the plastic boxes snap on uses for portable socket organization. Does any know of any other company who makes them with out the snap on price.
qananupu.jpg



Sent From Snap On Headquarters deep in China.
 

senor fozz

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 29, 2013
Messages
543
No kidding. I was just about done with filling my 1/2" drive SAE set when I realized that Kobalt doesn't make 3/8" deep impact, so now I obsess over the ONE Armstrong socket on there.

Plus, what do you with semi-deeps?

I would highly recommend a set of semi deeps. They have their place when working in cramped engines. I bought mine when i got sick of fighting scion xb's alternators at work.
 

ndoran

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2011
Messages
496
Only deep and short ? What about 6pt, 8pt, 12pt ? Do you have any Whitworths ? How about the old USS standard ? How about mid length ?

It never ends. You will never have enough. Welcome to the nightmare. :D

What about BSF, flex and then you can start on impacts
 
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