WOW! You do not mess around!
Nice how you marked all your screwdriver sizes on the tops. Are the ones in the 4th picture all multi-bit drivers with a specific driver in each?
Yes, I prefer buying good quality bits to buying good quality screwdrivers, but I also don't like constantly having to change out bit tips on jobs that require multiple bit types at the same time. I use the bit drivers 95% of the time and use the regular screwdrivers only when working on hot electrical, when screws are inset into their housings making bit screwdrivers too fat, or when I specifically want a screwdriver without a magnetic tip (rare). That keeps all my regular screwdriver tips nice a lot longer. I also have a ratcheting screwdriver or two with one or two of each size bit in them just for tossing in my tool pouch for working in attics etc to save on overall tool bulk.
Each of the labeled bit drivers also have handle bit storage, so I fill each handle with about 10-12 of the same replacement bits in addition to a small piece of soft foam so that the handle does not make any clanking noise at all until I have used about half of the replacement bits. Then the noise reminds me to refill the handle so I never run out of fresh bit tips even for larger jobs. this setup also allows me to use the screwdriver handles as a replacement bit source for my 3/8" drill when doing sheetrock, decking, etc.
The tops were just sanded quickly for the paint to stick better and then sprayed with extra white paint I had laying around. The labels were done in the most permanent type sharpie. The paint lasts a really long time, but it is actually dirtier in real life than the pictures imply. The sharpie I have to quickly re-draw after every few hours of screwdriver use as it rubs off slowly against my palm. It does help that the black screwdriver heads spin freely, it keeps the rubbing in my palm to a minimum and it helps the sharpie stay on a lot longer than it would on a regular screwdriver. That is why my regular screwdrivers have their size etched into the handle end, not just drawn in sharpie. For the etched screwdrivers the size of the etched symbol denotes the tip size of that driver in relation to the others.
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