To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

The ultimate hardware storage!!

To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

LEVE

Well-known member
Joined
Jun 23, 2008
Messages
1,727
Location
On the Willapa
They're huge. I once was at a shipyard that used one of those when the operator pushed the button to find a 35mm IBM aperture card. The trays rotated, one jammed and dumped 8000 cards all over her.

They're pretty neat if you have the room and can get parts and manuals. Most of them are getting a little long in the tooth, they'll need a little fixing.
 

Thumper68

Well-known member
Joined
May 16, 2013
Messages
5,134
Location
Duluth MN
My fathers business had a bigger version of this for collectable sports cards, my stupid uncles scrapped when they decided to move locations, it was too tall for the new location.

I would have loved to have it in my shop, it was just over 3 feet deep, 8 or 9 feet long and about 12 feet tall with several hundred dividable trays. As long as you knew what tray you needed it was a simple push of a few buttons to get what you needed.
 

coljar

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 26, 2010
Messages
6,243
Location
Belpre, Ohio
That thing is so cool, I'd punch out a wall just to make room for it. The thing's a conversation piece even if you didn't need it.
 

gregtwojeeps

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 30, 2013
Messages
5,096
Location
Ky
I have spent the last year tossing out hardware,electrical,plumbing IE: "stuff" that I had accumulated the passed 40 years. It was taking a 16' long x 8' tall wall just to store in all in bins. ...

It gets to the point at which I am currently positioned at my age of 62, that it is much easier when I start a project or doing a honey DOO, that I just pick up the hardware needed at Lowes rather than dig through bin after, bin of **** to find a bolt or thingamygig. . jmo :D
 

D KRAGER

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 16, 2007
Messages
581
Location
Central IL
My Grandpa had one of those in his farm shop, until he had an accident and burned the shop down.

(Don't use cutting torch with a can of gasoline on the workbench)
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

metalhead212121

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2010
Messages
2,898
They're huge. I once was at a shipyard that used one of those when the operator pushed the button to find a 35mm IBM aperture card. The trays rotated, one jammed and dumped 8000 cards all over her.

They're pretty neat if you have the room and can get parts and manuals. Most of them are getting a little long in the tooth, they'll need a little fixing.

For anyone that REALLY wants one and has deep pockets I'd suggest googling remstar. While these machine look good on paper they are WORTHLESS IMO. Yes they save space. What do they cost? I have no clue but I'm sure they're unbelievably expensive. These things are ******* maintenance WHORES! Nothing but problems with them in my experience. If you're working in a fast pace environment get ready to grab a beer and wait for the machine to do its job. If you are using it to store parts that come in boxes YOU'RE SCREWED! When you get a part that comes in a box you need to take the dimensions of the box and enter it into the machine. Simple enough right? What happens down the road the company that boxes the item decides to change the dimensions of the box???? Now you have one big cluster ****. I know it sounds like I'm stuck in the 70's and not grow with technology but this technology needs to be put through rigorous testing in fast passed environments. This machine is only good for people who aren't trying to play beat the clock. I have a friend of mine who works for corporate Mercedes Benz and told me his Remstar machine was down for a WEEK! In my experiences I was play with the machine and get what I needed out of it. From what my friend told me the carousel WOULDNT MOVE AT ALL!

Here's a video of what I'm talking about.
 

rob1200

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 11, 2013
Messages
519
Location
California
Here are the pictures from the Craigslist post:

attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


attachment.php


And the Craigslist text:
VINTAGE REMINGTON KARD-VEYER CABINET - $425 (EL MONTE) Los Angeles
Heavy duty metal cabinet for storing bolts, nails, screws, clips etc.
And has 12 lines of 6 drawers Vertical storage electric rolodex
Use in good condition 42" high X 70 wide X 27 deep
$425.00 obo.
 

Attachments

  • 00000_9S4frVHHcZL_600x450.jpg
    00000_9S4frVHHcZL_600x450.jpg
    22.5 KB · Views: 725
  • 00B0B_jM5OJUx6hHQ_600x450.jpg
    00B0B_jM5OJUx6hHQ_600x450.jpg
    22 KB · Views: 726
  • 01616_l7aSnsVl7jP_600x450.jpg
    01616_l7aSnsVl7jP_600x450.jpg
    27.2 KB · Views: 723
  • 00U0U_2EyI1lgVpeO_600x450.jpg
    00U0U_2EyI1lgVpeO_600x450.jpg
    18.2 KB · Views: 726
  • 00X0X_75ZxzkRwu1O_600x450.jpg
    00X0X_75ZxzkRwu1O_600x450.jpg
    22.8 KB · Views: 724

cparcell

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 21, 2013
Messages
77
Location
hillsboro ohio
The difference between new style carousel and this old one is apples to oranges. Let me know when you find the monitor and key board to enter the dimensions for this old school machine to work
 

nine4gmc

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 24, 2012
Messages
14,357
Location
Dallas
That's pretty awesome but you'd have to have a big shop to waste that kind of space just for cool factor.
 

kbs2244

Well-known member
Joined
Nov 11, 2006
Messages
14,065
Coolness factor - 9.5
Efficient Storage factor - 1.5
^^^^^^^^^^^
Agreed

But, I am thinking of copying the sliding panels style currently in the big box stores.
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom