I've always used tool boxes for storage, but I've never really given any other means much thought. Lately, however, I've been thinking about tool boards and how handy th...
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Chief Ben
I like your "theft deterrent" and alarm system.
I think you will like a tool board, I love both of mine, the one in the welding shop is on wheels so I can move it where I need it at,
and the one in the small machine shop is built on the wall over the work bench,
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What a sweetie![]()
Now this is what is meant as "tool control."
Be well...
I think shadow boards and toolbox foam cutouts definitely have a place.
When I was in the USAF, all toolboxes had to be inventoried before they could be taken on or off an aircraft. In the shop, all tools went back on the shadow board before anyone could go home. Leaving a tool unsecured could have a catastrophic result.
Great method of enforcing tool discipline, especially if your work tasks rarely change, and your needs are consistent day to day.
Much harder to do when you are constantly adding tools to your arsenal or you don't know what you'll need.

Dad has one on the workbench he built in 1977, just pegboard without the lines. As a kid I went crazy organizing it and its still that way.

You will not like what I think about tool boards. LOL They are a huge pain in the box! LOL
I am sorry if anyone is not bright enough to remember which drawer your tools are in. I don't fumble and I have 9 roll around boxes in 3 locations. If you can't remember where your tools are how do you remember how to fix what you are working on?
Tool boards get dirty and are harder to clean.
They look like cluttered and I hate the cluttered look
I hate reaching across the bench to grab a tool. I am 6-1 and have long arms and I still don't like it.
I hate having even the good hooks come out of the board.
I don't want to walk across my shop to get a tool.
I was a tool and die maker and working swing shift while I ran my construction company days. As an architect I like to keep things simple. I hate working in a mess like I see in so many shops. If I walk into a garage or shop when needing work done I walk out if it is dirty and cluttered. IT is rare that I need work done. I can do 99.9 percent of it myself. If you can't keep a clean shop I don't need to hire you. If you are sloppy you will do a sloppy job. If you spend more time walking over and looking for things in a cluttered work space than you will spend more time serching than doing the job.
If you have a good tool cart that is has everthing at your finger tips when working fast you will be better off than tools on a board.
With all that said I have 3 shops. One in the end of my huge tractor pole barn. A shop in the back of the house and one in a second 2 car garage in California.
I have a full cabinet shop with a 12 inch jointer, 2 unisaws 20 inch band saw, Hitachi resaws. I have 5 band saws 5 different drill presses and 11 ginders and buffers. All in all I have 81 machines. I have lateral files full of power tools and air guns. They are all marked on the front of the drawers. I use the old bank check files that are 42 inches wide with double drawers. I have them full of clamps special tools etc. I have over 500 clamps. Others are full of sorted nuts and bolts. I have thousands of nuts and bolts, screws and fastners. I have 14 files full of tools and I have cabinets built in all the shops that are full of tools. I know when there is a tool missing because my family does not put things back. I have hundreds of carving tools, hundreds of hand planes, braces and woodworking tools. I really have it all. I have been collecting tools sense 1955. I have 57 set of wrenches. I had to get an inventory for insurance. It took me 6 months of my spare time to list it all.
I am sorry I am so anil. I never loose a tool. When I am done with a job I wipe them down with a rag that has light oil and then wipe them off with a clean rag and put them back.
I don't waste time looking for things. I know where everything is because everthing has its place. Some tools have been in the same drawers for 45 years.
I see so much put up forsale that is full of rust and dirt. If you are gong to put something up forsale at least clean the rust off and make it look good. My tools do not rust, by cabinets don't rust. I put a dehumidifyer in every shop. The shops are kept at 50 degrees in the winter when not in use.
I even oil my shovels and garden tools when I am done. It only takes a few seconds to oil the shovel and hang it up in the garden shed.
I have a full cabinet shop. A full machine shop that has all the sheet metal equipment and wellders. I have all the different welders. I have a hoist and pit.
My shops are not fancy but when you walk in everything is in its place and there is no clutter. File cabinets make great tool boxes for power tools, coards and hoses.
Every time I see something haning on the wall I get the feeling that I should hang myself. Haning tools and items is not handy. If you think so then you are not an organized person. I have cabinets I built on all my walls. I don't have a place to hang things. I have all my bottles, cans and things in vertical metal cabinets. I even have all my cases of oil in cabinets. I don't put things under the work benches. I don't leave anything on the floor that dos not belong there.
Talk about a fast clean up. I even wash down the tool boxes if the get dust on them.
Bottom line. I hate peg and tool board with a passion. They are uggly, usless and dust collectors. You always end up haning something over what is on the board. Then it really becomes a pain in the box. I have been there done that, lived with it and then ripped them down and put them on the burn pile 30 years ago. LOL Funny thing how all my cheap craftsman hand tools made me a good living. I have the Sanp-on and all the other brands becasue I buy estates and lots at auction. I still have the C mans tools from the 60's. The only socket I broke was used with a 2 foot cheater pipe. If you use the right tool for the job you will not break your tools. If you break your tools or damage them then you don't know the propper way to break things loose or are cutting something with too small of cutting tool. Enough said. Hang yourself not your tools. I have thousands of tools and none are in site.
Do you want to know what I really think? LOL LOL This post should stir the pot. LOL
I still have teenage sons at home so a locking toolbox is a necessity.
OK that is cool! Specs? did you make it yourself?
I think you will like a tool board, I love both of mine, the one in the welding shop is on wheels so I can move it where I need it at,
and the one in the small machine shop is built on the wall over the work bench,
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Bottom line. I hate peg and tool board with a passion. They are uggly, usless and dust collectors.
