I needed a convenient, strong, and dry storage solution for my garden tools and after stumbling across StorEase I knew its heavy-duty, rust-proof, highly customisable set up was exactly what I needed.
I also already had a variety of tools to put up. These are the links to similar ones of the few I got from Bunnings but mine are older versions:
I needed a space to store my garden tools and wanted them to be accessible enough that any could be collected, used, and returned to their rightful place without having to move various tools around. I had recently been playing with some pegboard ideas so thought that's where I would go with this. I calculated the dimensions available on the wall and mapped out the space on the grass to arrange the tools and see them laid out and organised.
I then took a trip to Bunnings and had a look in the storage and shelving aisles. I needed something that would work for the heavy weight of some of my tools as well as remain rust-free over time (as the storage is on an exterior brick wall, under a deck on the Coffs Coast (lots of sub-tropical humid weather and close to the beach).
Rack-It wasn't flexible enough for my needs and Pinnacle/other pegboard systems just didn't seem like the right choice long-term.
I stumbled across the StorEase hooks and decided they were sufficiently heavy-duty for the project. Then when I discovered their rack system could be individually mounted and cut to size, I was sold. I stood in the aisle looking at the different types of hooks available and made a plan for which hooks I'd use for which tools.
My first step at home was to clean out the storage area, ready for work. Here is the before photo - what a mess!
Once clean, I started installing one rack at a time. Each rack has 6 holes to mount with screws (two directly above each other at each end and two directly above one another. The racks come with really good quality screws and 8mm masonry wall plugs.
All four racks on the right side use two "Dual Utility Hooks"
It's important to note that the rails have a guideline of up to 100kg storage each but it does not specify the number of hooks used to satisfy that requirement. Many of my tools are my grandfather's and his were very good quality and heavy. The racks and hooks are incredibly secure and haven't slipped or bowed a millimetre since installation so I'm very satisfied.
Another important detail is installation of the hooks onto the brackets as the instructions do not provide clear directions. The hooks can be inserted anywhere along the length of the bracket. You slip the top tongue into the top groove at an angle, push the bottom middle tongue into the bottom groove with the two outside tongues at the bottom on the front of the groove, then pull the hook vertically downwards until you hear a click which locks them into position. It's important that the direction of pull is perpendicular to the rail otherwise the hook may twist sideways instead of locking. I found using small taps with a rubber mallet helped with alignment.
Hello @Emma-Lee
Thank you so much for sharing your tool bracket storage rack. It looks amazing and so well organized. It's good that you've taken a photo of the garden tool wall. There'll be no more guessing where the tools go to.
Again, thank you for sharing such a fantastic project.
Eric
Afternoon @Emma-Lee
Brilliant! I have all my yard tools standing next to my wall under the eaves of the house, I have considered a whole bunch of things to try but havnt got around to it. The StorEase hooks are perfect!
I love how you laid it out on the grass before hand Tho wasnt sure what the Letter Abbreviations stood for until the end (I think they are forthe type of hooks?)
I think having your tools the way you have stored them make it more likely you will use the right tool instead of grabbing the closest thing to leaver or dig) , Well maybe thats just me
Dave
Thanks, @Dave-1!
Yes the letter abbreviations are the types of hook:
DU = Dual Utility
OH = Open Hook
DH = Double Hook
I was in store when I came across the product and found my photo and drew on it so I'd remember why I'd bought 8 dual utility hooks 😂 Obviously the final layout is slightly different than the original plan but I'm happy with it. StorEase also has baskets on hooks which makes me think I could use them for a rack underneath the potting bench for hand tools such as dibbers, hose attachments, trowels etc.
I completely agree about grabbing the first tool you see. If the mattock is buried under too many things I'll grab the hoe and before I know it I've bent the hoe and not made a dent to the job I'm trying to do 😅.
I cannot recommend the system highly enough! If you do end up using it and designing a system for your garden tools I'd love to see the end result 😄! It took me about half a day in total to put the brackets up but it would've been quicker if the chuck on my hammer drill wasn't starting to wear out and the drill bit kept slipping 🙄. That's my next job!
Emma-Lee
Thanks @EricL! Appreciate your encouragement 😄
Just a note if your chuck is slipping a bit an old trick Ive used is an old flathead screwdriver against the tooth of the chuck and a short sharp "tap" will lock it in place and then the reverse to unlock it. Note its not good for the chuck but you use and do what needs to be done.
I have bumped up the list of things to buy for the StorEase brackets
Dave
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