So, I don't have a lot of tools (comparatively) but my collection has grown from a small ammo can to multiple medium sized totes over the last few years.
I'm trying to get a handle on things and trying to organize them in ways that make sense.
I could organize them by the "thing" that I'm working on. So, there'd be a section/box for wood, another for metal, another for electrical, etc. The circ saw would go in the woodwork box, the angle grinder would go in the metalworking box, the multimeter would go in the electrical box. This would save me from digging through multiple sections to retrieve something.
But, I could also organize them by "function of the tool". So, there'd be a section for measuring/diagnostics (tape measure, level, multmeter, obd2 scanner), another for fastening (screwdrivers, wrenches, sockets), another for cutting/filing (all kinds of saws, files, cutters), another for material handling (clamps), and so on.
The second would work if I didn't want multiples of something. E.g. I need a tape measure for both wood working and metal work. So, do I just buy one and transfer as needed, or buy two so there is one in each box, or buy one and keep it in the "measuring" section. I could just buy two $5 tape measures. But, the tape measure I find works best costs $20. So, do I spend the extra money to buy another favorite tape measure, or save that money and put it towards I tool I don't have?
It doesn't help that I overthink things sometimes.
I should mention that I am by no means a tradesman or even a PRO-sumer. I'm buying my tool collection so that I can be more self-reliant. That is my primary long-term goal. And I'm still in the stage of buying tools, where 25% of the time, after buying the tool, within 6-12 months I think to myself "did I really need that tool." If I sell that tool to, 25% of the time, I end up needing that tool again within a 12-24 month period.
ALSO, I don't have the luxury of wall hanging my tools (pegboards, french cleat, etc). The tools have to live in boxes that have to be closed after the work is done.
I'm trying to get a handle on things and trying to organize them in ways that make sense.
I could organize them by the "thing" that I'm working on. So, there'd be a section/box for wood, another for metal, another for electrical, etc. The circ saw would go in the woodwork box, the angle grinder would go in the metalworking box, the multimeter would go in the electrical box. This would save me from digging through multiple sections to retrieve something.
But, I could also organize them by "function of the tool". So, there'd be a section for measuring/diagnostics (tape measure, level, multmeter, obd2 scanner), another for fastening (screwdrivers, wrenches, sockets), another for cutting/filing (all kinds of saws, files, cutters), another for material handling (clamps), and so on.
The second would work if I didn't want multiples of something. E.g. I need a tape measure for both wood working and metal work. So, do I just buy one and transfer as needed, or buy two so there is one in each box, or buy one and keep it in the "measuring" section. I could just buy two $5 tape measures. But, the tape measure I find works best costs $20. So, do I spend the extra money to buy another favorite tape measure, or save that money and put it towards I tool I don't have?
It doesn't help that I overthink things sometimes.
I should mention that I am by no means a tradesman or even a PRO-sumer. I'm buying my tool collection so that I can be more self-reliant. That is my primary long-term goal. And I'm still in the stage of buying tools, where 25% of the time, after buying the tool, within 6-12 months I think to myself "did I really need that tool." If I sell that tool to, 25% of the time, I end up needing that tool again within a 12-24 month period.
ALSO, I don't have the luxury of wall hanging my tools (pegboards, french cleat, etc). The tools have to live in boxes that have to be closed after the work is done.

