It’s been a long time since I did a review. This was supposed to be one of the cornerstones of my work so that at some point I could gain a business advantage buying, using and reviewing items. It’s not that I haven’t bought things since 2020, I suppose that it is I kind of forgot about reviews.
This is one of those items that I always wanted. I imagined that I would have a bright red, Craftsman toolbox with everything organized and accessible. It is not just that, but also I would have space to add more tools, if needed. It sounds a little fruity, but another thing I could accessorize.
When I moved to South Carolina, I built a bench in the garage that had custom slider drawers. I could see all of my wrenches in order so I could easily find what I wanted. When we moved here in 2005, the shop already had cabinets so I stashed stuff where it would fit. It wasn’t my ideal, but it worked well enough that I couldn’t justify the cost.
About a year ago, the plastic container that organized all of my sockets started to fail. That meant that every time I was pulling out my sockets, I was having to reorganize them because they would fall all over the place. To top it off, my son started ‘borrowing’ tools and leaving them in his car. I repeatedly asked him to return them when done and because they weren’t too organized, I really couldn’t tell what was missing. Plus, with my sometime working on cars, I find that I was constantly going back and forth to the shop when I could have what I need right next to me.
I finally decided to make the plunge and buy a tool chest. I had some experience with a Craftsman tool chest in the lab and I knew that weight can quickly add up and then things don’t work so well. I suppose some of the difference between the consumer chests like Kobalt, Craftsman, Husky, etc. is the real amount of weight each drawer could hold. I don’t know for sure, but I think the Snap-On ones can really handle the load which is why they are 10 times more expensive, even the used ones.
I knew that I wanted ball bearing drawers. They just work better. I also looked at the total weight capacity. In this case, the 36″ chest castors were rated for 1500 pounds. The 40″ chest was rated for 1200 pounds. Even though I wanted the larger size, overall weight capacity was more important to me. I also liked the price better at $400 versus $600 and I got 10% coupon, I was sold on my choice.
I looked at the different brands. I know that Stanley bought Craftsman so DeWalt and Craftsman in theory are the same. The truth is, I couldn’t find much difference between any of the brands based on specs including US General at Harbor Freight or Stack-On at Napa. Unless you are going to pony up for Snap-On, it boils down to color, drawer layout and price.
I probably overanalyzed every detail because I couldn’t find exactly what I wanted, but I saw this blue color and I really liked it. I knew that I really would have no practical opinion without actually putting tools in it and using it. The price was good, the need was there and it was a good project to work on while my wife was in Texas and I was spending all of my time organizing junk in the garage going through my in-laws estate.
Thin drawers are good because everything can be laid out in a way that each can be seen and extra stuff cant be put in the drawers. When the drawers start getting deeper, then it feels like there is room to add an organizer. What I have learned about those is that the cost starts to really add up and they add a lot of bulk to the overall use of the chest. But again, one of the main goals was to organize tools.
With organizers in the drawer, they take up a lot of space. That means that there is a lot less weight in each drawer (at least for now). I found that Harbor Freight has a number of inexpensive options, in stock. Of course online you can easily start having more cost in the organizers than in the actual chest.
Here is my analysis.
Score | Advantages | Disadvantages | |
Value | 5/5 | This was the most inexpensive choices I have seen with the features I wanted | Still $400 |
Quality | 3/5 | The locks and latch are really flimsy. Top lid could easily be pried open to access the rest of the top | |
I am not a fan of soft close drawer runners. They offer artificial resistance and causes the drawer to operate stiffly when cold | |||
Performance | 4/5 | I got all of my tools in the chest. I have been able to roll it to the vehicle to work on things rather than running back and forth to the shop. | I wish there were more thin drawers. My optimum design would be 80%, 1 1/2 inch drawers with maybe two larger drawers. |
End Your Programming Routine: It is like most things for me. I dreamed of one day having a nice chest with everything organized. Now that I have it, it is anti-climactic. I will say rolling it next to my work has been nice and it is so much less frustrating to be able to easily find the tools without sorting through the pile of wrenches. I have seen nothing that would make me say “buy that, not this”.
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