a52-830
Well-known member
i have been thrashing about getting new tool storage for awhile now. i've made spreadsheets, i've compared harbor freight, home depot, and several levels of craftsman boxes. I've documented the space the tools i have use, how tall the drawers need to be, and how many of each depth drawer i am using. i measured the space i have available.
i came to two conclusions:
1) per linear foot, 26"/27" stacks seem to offer the best value.
does not matter the brand, those small stacks are always cheapest per unit of comparison. ( i have written about square inches and cubic inches before, no need to repeat it here)
2) per linear foot, 40" full width drawer stacks offer the best storage density.
actually, full width drawers offer the most room, but finding a chest wider than about 40" with all (or substantially all, maybe the top one or two split) drawers seems impossible.
since my drawer needs biased towards shallower drawers, and that doesn't seem to be the focus of current manufacturing (the hf26" stack is a notable exception) i started looking at used stacks on craigslist and ebay, since 30 years ago they seemed to make them with both shallower drawers, and the bottom would be taller. you can get 10 drawer high craftsman bottoms from that era. the problem there is that 99% of older tool boxes seem to be made of gold. people want a lot of money for things that "will look great after you clean it up a bit".
one evening, i noticed a 27" snap on bottom cabinet for the same price as the 80's craftsman one above it. that caused me to start looking at older snap on boxes. there are a lot of newer snap on boxes around, with people looking to get back what they put into them, but they also tend to be large, the smallest seem to start about 60" wide, which is wayyyy to large for me.
i found mention of a KRL777, which looked pretty good, but they are exceptionally rare. either people really like theirs, or snap on didnt sell many. i dont think they listed them for long, so i assume the latter. then, i found what appeared to be the prefect box for me, a kr550/kr555 stack. 66" tall, 35" wide, 16 levels of drawers high. sure, the top 3 levels are split, with 6 narrow drawers, and one really narrow and deep one, but the set had 9986 square inches of storage. more storage space than two 27" stacks, in 33% less wall space, although it will stick out 3.5" more.
now, if i could find one inexpensive enough to satisfy my cheapness, i would be happy. it took some time, but i did. i bought a kr2015 ( i think. a kr2015 was a kr550 and a kr555 sold as a set. i assume they are a kr2015 since they are keyed the same).
i have partially solved my problem. i need more space that this, but it is a great start, and leaves plenty of room for the additional capacity i still need.
i spent this afternoon cleaning the drawers from the bottom. not the cabinet, just the drawers. it look longer than i expected, but they look better than i had feared. i learned some interesting things.
the dirtiest part of a drawer seems to be the back edge. these drawers have the steel folded over to help with rigidity, and that top surface was the dirtiest part.
the most banged up part is the top of the drawer pulls. not the top of the drawer next to the pulls, but the surface above the chrome trim piece before it bends back into the drawer. it looks like this was captain hook's chest.
lastly, i know some people here have speculated that the built in drawer dividers from this era were to stiffen the drawers. looking at this box, that seems unlikely. the 6" inch bottom drawer has a stiffener under the drawer, over the full width, edge to edge. the dividers inside, while spot-welded to the bottom, are not attached to the sides, stopping just before. i would imagine that if they were there for stiffness, attaching them to the sides would have been part of that.
the box is worse than i hoped, but better than i expected. i am happy with it.
now, my first two questions:
1) what is the preferred method for getting the chrome trim off the drawer pulls without ruining it? it appears that it is just being held on with friction, but i have learned that in things like this, there is often a trick. pull down on them? slide them off to the side? sing jim croce songs to them softly until they just drop off themselves?
2) the matching locks lack keys. has anyone replaced a lock on one of these boxes, or a similar box, with one of the new snap on locks:
https://store.snapon.com/Lock-Assemblies-Lock-Assembly-Tubular-One-Lock-Two-Keys--P653027.aspx
i haven't checked the top box, nor taken out the one in the bottom box (removing and cleaning the drawers took all afternoon), but they appear to be compatible. i just dont want to spend 50$ on a pair of locks to find that they won't fit.
thanx for reading this far.
i came to two conclusions:
1) per linear foot, 26"/27" stacks seem to offer the best value.
does not matter the brand, those small stacks are always cheapest per unit of comparison. ( i have written about square inches and cubic inches before, no need to repeat it here)
2) per linear foot, 40" full width drawer stacks offer the best storage density.
actually, full width drawers offer the most room, but finding a chest wider than about 40" with all (or substantially all, maybe the top one or two split) drawers seems impossible.
since my drawer needs biased towards shallower drawers, and that doesn't seem to be the focus of current manufacturing (the hf26" stack is a notable exception) i started looking at used stacks on craigslist and ebay, since 30 years ago they seemed to make them with both shallower drawers, and the bottom would be taller. you can get 10 drawer high craftsman bottoms from that era. the problem there is that 99% of older tool boxes seem to be made of gold. people want a lot of money for things that "will look great after you clean it up a bit".
one evening, i noticed a 27" snap on bottom cabinet for the same price as the 80's craftsman one above it. that caused me to start looking at older snap on boxes. there are a lot of newer snap on boxes around, with people looking to get back what they put into them, but they also tend to be large, the smallest seem to start about 60" wide, which is wayyyy to large for me.
i found mention of a KRL777, which looked pretty good, but they are exceptionally rare. either people really like theirs, or snap on didnt sell many. i dont think they listed them for long, so i assume the latter. then, i found what appeared to be the prefect box for me, a kr550/kr555 stack. 66" tall, 35" wide, 16 levels of drawers high. sure, the top 3 levels are split, with 6 narrow drawers, and one really narrow and deep one, but the set had 9986 square inches of storage. more storage space than two 27" stacks, in 33% less wall space, although it will stick out 3.5" more.
now, if i could find one inexpensive enough to satisfy my cheapness, i would be happy. it took some time, but i did. i bought a kr2015 ( i think. a kr2015 was a kr550 and a kr555 sold as a set. i assume they are a kr2015 since they are keyed the same).
i have partially solved my problem. i need more space that this, but it is a great start, and leaves plenty of room for the additional capacity i still need.
i spent this afternoon cleaning the drawers from the bottom. not the cabinet, just the drawers. it look longer than i expected, but they look better than i had feared. i learned some interesting things.
the dirtiest part of a drawer seems to be the back edge. these drawers have the steel folded over to help with rigidity, and that top surface was the dirtiest part.
the most banged up part is the top of the drawer pulls. not the top of the drawer next to the pulls, but the surface above the chrome trim piece before it bends back into the drawer. it looks like this was captain hook's chest.
lastly, i know some people here have speculated that the built in drawer dividers from this era were to stiffen the drawers. looking at this box, that seems unlikely. the 6" inch bottom drawer has a stiffener under the drawer, over the full width, edge to edge. the dividers inside, while spot-welded to the bottom, are not attached to the sides, stopping just before. i would imagine that if they were there for stiffness, attaching them to the sides would have been part of that.
the box is worse than i hoped, but better than i expected. i am happy with it.
now, my first two questions:
1) what is the preferred method for getting the chrome trim off the drawer pulls without ruining it? it appears that it is just being held on with friction, but i have learned that in things like this, there is often a trick. pull down on them? slide them off to the side? sing jim croce songs to them softly until they just drop off themselves?
2) the matching locks lack keys. has anyone replaced a lock on one of these boxes, or a similar box, with one of the new snap on locks:
https://store.snapon.com/Lock-Assemblies-Lock-Assembly-Tubular-One-Lock-Two-Keys--P653027.aspx
i haven't checked the top box, nor taken out the one in the bottom box (removing and cleaning the drawers took all afternoon), but they appear to be compatible. i just dont want to spend 50$ on a pair of locks to find that they won't fit.
thanx for reading this far.


