Follow me on Instagram: / eusonic I came up with a really simple way to make sure I always put my drill bits back in the right spot. Music: www.epidemicso...
The bits are for all the drills. If he opens the case and sees a painted rod, he knows he has a bit missing from the case and knows which drill to check first.
You’d need a lot of different colors to paint the end of the drill bits, because there are so many sizes. And you’d need to break out the paint again every time you got a new bit.
Great idea for you, but most people don't waste money buying multiple drills, they simply replace the bit in 10sec. With one drill, you can use a pencil, washer, or whatever you want to drop in the trough you removed a bit from.
Stainless steel will corrode the inferior and less noble metal of the drill chuck. This is madness, extra step and giving yourself more work. Color code the drill bit.
I think the rods are galvanized steel, but I’m not sure. Corrosion hasn’t been an issue, at least not in my workshop environment. I don’t think color coating the bits would work for my needs. You’d need a lot of different colors because there are so many sizes. And that would be a lot of bits to paint. And I get new bits a lot more often than I get new drills.
That is probably the most unique solution for drill bit organization I have come across. Bravo and I hope it’s working out for you!
Interesting, I don't use that many drills so I'll just throw a colored chit in the space where the bit came from. Thanks for this!
Hi, great idea, but why don't paint the bottom of each drill bits. Imagine that the box falls down and everything gets mixed up.
The bits are for all the drills. If he opens the case and sees a painted rod, he knows he has a bit missing from the case and knows which drill to check first.
You’d need a lot of different colors to paint the end of the drill bits, because there are so many sizes. And you’d need to break out the paint again every time you got a new bit.
Great idea for you, but most people don't waste money buying multiple drills, they simply replace the bit in 10sec. With one drill, you can use a pencil, washer, or whatever you want to drop in the trough you removed a bit from.
dang. that's actually incredibly smart.
Perfect, till you drop the case on the floor.
great system!
Stainless steel will corrode the inferior and less noble metal of the drill chuck.
This is madness, extra step and giving yourself more work. Color code the drill bit.
I think the rods are galvanized steel, but I’m not sure. Corrosion hasn’t been an issue, at least not in my workshop environment. I don’t think color coating the bits would work for my needs. You’d need a lot of different colors because there are so many sizes. And that would be a lot of bits to paint. And I get new bits a lot more often than I get new drills.
@@eusonicmakes thought u said they are stainless. You have 7 colours say and they repeat
not bad
Lol😅