Microship
Member
Hi folks...
I'm new here, but have landed in your discussions many times whilst Googling for answers about tool-related questions. I just joined yesterday, and did an intro post that gives a bit of background and points to a 2.4 meg PDF about my 24' mobile lab.
Anyway, since the Introductions forum is probably not the place for a tech question, I'll jump in here. I've seen a lot of interesting threads about tool boxes, I can't justify the cost of a Gerstner, and I don't like junk that falls apart... in my lab I have a big stainless Kobalt that is adequate (although not inspiring) along with a battered old Craftsman from my salad days in the '70s. But I now have a much harder problem to solve.
Basically, I'm converting the original salon region of my 44' steel pilothouse sailboat into a lab/studio, with four 19" sloping rackspaces wrapped around a central seat. (These are networking/systems, media and audio production, communciations, and lab instruments.) The central desktop retracts and a full-size digital piano can be pulled out on stainless drawer slides, and there are a few other "transformer" features as well as integral compressor, shop vac, parts inventory drawers, 3D rapid prototyping machine, and printed-circuit fabrication tools. Most power tools are in individual bags attached to labeled and tethered lines, stuffed back into a deep cabinet that would otherwise be dead space.
But here's the issue. On the right side of all this, adjacent to the "Lab" console and above a small "wing" of the desktop, I want tool storage... my existing methods aboard have been a real nuisance and thus rarely put away (roll-ups and kits in a drawer down at floor level, with power tools in an under-seat bin). I have about 24" of width to play with, around 16" depth, and 32" from desktop to ceiling (including an opening lid, if it's that type of multi-drawer tool chest). Width and depth are a little tweakable if needed; I'm still working on the console system and have some flexibility.
Conditions are intermittently rough, and I've learned from YIKES experience that I don't want to leave the helm in a blow to deal with a heavy drawer violently slamming open and shut on every wave due to a wimpy latch that got loose. The tool chest has to be sturdily lockable, and built well enough to handle years of movement ranging from gentle rolls to negative-G moments (and their aftermath).
Money is an object, but I certainly don't want to waste it on stuff that will just have to be replaced when it falls apart after a lot of time embedding it into an installation. I assume that rules out HF and the like, so I went to Amazon and bookmarked a bunch of Excel, Waterloo, and Homak products... none of which I've ever actually touched. First question: are any of these adequate, given the environment, or are you rolling your eyes at their very mention?
I was initially intrigued by the wood ones at Grizzly, but online reviews of things that look identical did not exactly inspire confidence. The boat's interior is beautiful wood joinery (teak/holly sole, mahogany, and nicely finished marine ply), so wood would be my aesthetic preference... but MOST important is something that is not going to rattle to pieces. Stainless would be excellent, and if it's mild steel, it needs to be powder-coated or otherwise passivated... because, well: Water corrodes. Salt water corrodes absolutely.
If any community has the answer, it's this one... so I'm looking forward to any comments, suggestions, brands to avoid, lust-worthy alternatives that won't cost and arm and a leg, or outta-the-box solutions that I'm not currently visualizing.
Many thanks! Here's a pic of the ship; more are at the Nomadness walkthrough and the related blog. I'll follow up with reports and photos... this should be a fun project.
Cheers,
Steve
I'm new here, but have landed in your discussions many times whilst Googling for answers about tool-related questions. I just joined yesterday, and did an intro post that gives a bit of background and points to a 2.4 meg PDF about my 24' mobile lab.
Anyway, since the Introductions forum is probably not the place for a tech question, I'll jump in here. I've seen a lot of interesting threads about tool boxes, I can't justify the cost of a Gerstner, and I don't like junk that falls apart... in my lab I have a big stainless Kobalt that is adequate (although not inspiring) along with a battered old Craftsman from my salad days in the '70s. But I now have a much harder problem to solve.
Basically, I'm converting the original salon region of my 44' steel pilothouse sailboat into a lab/studio, with four 19" sloping rackspaces wrapped around a central seat. (These are networking/systems, media and audio production, communciations, and lab instruments.) The central desktop retracts and a full-size digital piano can be pulled out on stainless drawer slides, and there are a few other "transformer" features as well as integral compressor, shop vac, parts inventory drawers, 3D rapid prototyping machine, and printed-circuit fabrication tools. Most power tools are in individual bags attached to labeled and tethered lines, stuffed back into a deep cabinet that would otherwise be dead space.
But here's the issue. On the right side of all this, adjacent to the "Lab" console and above a small "wing" of the desktop, I want tool storage... my existing methods aboard have been a real nuisance and thus rarely put away (roll-ups and kits in a drawer down at floor level, with power tools in an under-seat bin). I have about 24" of width to play with, around 16" depth, and 32" from desktop to ceiling (including an opening lid, if it's that type of multi-drawer tool chest). Width and depth are a little tweakable if needed; I'm still working on the console system and have some flexibility.
Conditions are intermittently rough, and I've learned from YIKES experience that I don't want to leave the helm in a blow to deal with a heavy drawer violently slamming open and shut on every wave due to a wimpy latch that got loose. The tool chest has to be sturdily lockable, and built well enough to handle years of movement ranging from gentle rolls to negative-G moments (and their aftermath).
Money is an object, but I certainly don't want to waste it on stuff that will just have to be replaced when it falls apart after a lot of time embedding it into an installation. I assume that rules out HF and the like, so I went to Amazon and bookmarked a bunch of Excel, Waterloo, and Homak products... none of which I've ever actually touched. First question: are any of these adequate, given the environment, or are you rolling your eyes at their very mention?
I was initially intrigued by the wood ones at Grizzly, but online reviews of things that look identical did not exactly inspire confidence. The boat's interior is beautiful wood joinery (teak/holly sole, mahogany, and nicely finished marine ply), so wood would be my aesthetic preference... but MOST important is something that is not going to rattle to pieces. Stainless would be excellent, and if it's mild steel, it needs to be powder-coated or otherwise passivated... because, well: Water corrodes. Salt water corrodes absolutely.
If any community has the answer, it's this one... so I'm looking forward to any comments, suggestions, brands to avoid, lust-worthy alternatives that won't cost and arm and a leg, or outta-the-box solutions that I'm not currently visualizing.
Many thanks! Here's a pic of the ship; more are at the Nomadness walkthrough and the related blog. I'll follow up with reports and photos... this should be a fun project.
Cheers,
Steve