I'd go a step further and argue that the cheapo toolboxes are just outright better than the fancy truck toolbox for the home user. You sort of touched on it - the professional toolboxes are designed to secure your stuff. You have lockers, hutches and features like that which add a lot of expense and bulk to your toolbox but are really features out of necessity of how your toolbox will be used rather than the best option.It really doesn't matter how "good" a lista/truck tool box is - the average home users likely will never see the benefits of a $5,000+ tool box.
I'd go a step further and argue that the cheapo toolboxes are just outright better than the fancy truck toolbox for the home user. You sort of touched on it - the professional toolboxes are designed to secure your stuff. You have lockers, hutches and features like that which add a lot of expense and bulk to your toolbox but are really features out of necessity of how your toolbox will be used rather than the best option.
A home user can just have a nice work bench; they don't need to cram themselves into a hutch. They can also put things into a cupboard or a cabinet, put them on shelves, hang it off a coat hook and so forth. A locker isn't a nice to have, you get it because you need it. Same thing applies to the fancy power tool drawers.
Its also much cheaper and easier to go taller and get more storage space out of a toolbox that doesn't need to move around. A home user can secure their stacked craftsman tool box to a wall. A professional user can't rely on that being an option so their tool storage ends up taking up more floor space.
Truck toolboxes are just specialized tools built to be the best at their intended application.
Or F150 VS Mack truck. Both are built to do work and can tow stuff but getting a Mack truck as a home user because it is built tougher and can tow more is kind of stupid. And truckers aren't kitting out those fancy sleeper cabs because they are better than a house. It's just what they need.Very good points right here. It's like asking which is a better vehicle, and f150 or a miata. Depends what you want to do.
And even within my specialty of automotive, it varies. Working at a single make? And the owner or dealer actually has the required special tools and they're usable? You legitimately just need hand tools? All of that is very different from my workplace where we do all makes through a 30 year span of what the PA rust has yet to return to the earth. A craftsman box is just fine for my coworker who keeps 12 wrenches in a drawer. It isn't going to hold my ball joint presses and survive.Or F150 VS Mack truck. Both are built to do work and can tow stuff but getting a Mack truck as a home user because it is built tougher and can tow more is kind of stupid. And truckers aren't kitting out those fancy sleeper cabs because they are better than a house. It's just what they need.
The box I linked to is around $1000 via the nepros website. Not terrible I suppose if it's made in Japan. Cute little thing you could use as a diagnostic cart I guess. Some people find value in first world manufacturing, which also changes the price/value equation.LOL.
A lot of this depends on how much space you have too. I am a home gamer but keep my hand tools in a KRL 722 (bought used) because it fit my space perfectly, had the right layout, and I can use the top as a work bench with a wood topper I made for it. I don't have room for a dedicated workbench or lots of wall storage for tools. I did build shelves for tools best stored in cases and I built a power station for all my battery tools but for hand tools I knew what layout I wanted and the size I could fit and found my perfect match. I lived with a series 1 HF 44" for 7 years and knew what I was looking for in a replacement.I'd go a step further and argue that the cheapo toolboxes are just outright better than the fancy truck toolbox for the home user. You sort of touched on it - the professional toolboxes are designed to secure your stuff. You have lockers, hutches and features like that which add a lot of expense and bulk to your toolbox but are really features out of necessity of how your toolbox will be used rather than the best option.
A home user can just have a nice work bench; they don't need to cram themselves into a hutch. They can also put things into a cupboard or a cabinet, put them on shelves, hang it off a coat hook and so forth. A locker isn't a nice to have, you get it because you need it. Same thing applies to the fancy power tool drawers.
Its also much cheaper and easier to go taller and get more storage space out of a toolbox that doesn't need to move around. A home user can secure their stacked craftsman tool box to a wall. A professional user can't rely on that being an option so their tool storage ends up taking up more floor space.
Truck toolboxes are just specialized tools built to be the best at their intended application.
I think Harbor Freight has the best answers to this question. For the money the U. S. General boxes seem impossible to beat. If I needed a tool box that's where I would go for one.
Lots of good points in here but IMO there are some bare minimums a box should have.
Ball bearing slides
Locking wheels/casters (if your box has them)
Full extension drawers
At LEAST 20ga steel for the main panels
Depends on whether your want your drawer rating or slide rating to be the weakest pointThat's what I'm looking for.
Now, are ball bearing slides better than roller bearings?
I want "really good" as per the thread title
Lots of good points in here but IMO there are some bare minimums a box should have.
Ball bearing slides
Locking wheels/casters (if your box has them)
Full extension drawers
At LEAST 20ga steel for the main panels
DIY/Homegamer:Let's go with workshop/garage boxes not a mobile service truck