09-29-2014, 03:57 PM
t4d said:
I guess it boils down to this: how much time and effort to organize? The time spent to sort thousands of old nails, screws, washers, etc. would be considerable, and would also require constant maintenance! On the other hand, the time spent digging through large containers of assorted stuff is frustrating! So..........where is the "sweet spot"??
Welcome to the forum.
Let me assure you that you are hardly unique. Organizing this kind of hardware is a project that has exponentially diminishing returns.
Let me suggest that first you dump the unorganized stuff into a coffee can or bucket, write today's date on it (more on that in a minute). Now leave the junk bucket be for now.
Start by organizing from now forward. You need a shelf that you can organize screw boxes on. I have a small metal organizer with plastic trays (small unique stuff) and then I have a bunch of stacking plastic bins. All sit on the same shelf. I stack screw and nail boxes so I can see the label, screws go left, nails right, with no more effort expended on type or size since I can see the labels. The bins are for loose stuff. I don't bother to organize loose parts past the level of big screw/little screw/nut/washer/big nail/little nail. So I trade future searching time for present organizing time without spending too much time on something that I may or may not ever use, while at the same time making sure I can at least search in the right bin. If a bin gets full (rarely) I dump half in the trash and put it back on the shelf. Its just not worth the sort time. If that just bothers the OCD person inside of you too much then you have to decide how much time are you going to waste so that the OCD part of you doesn't have any anxiety over something you will forget about by tomorrow. Find the tradeoff you are happy with. So organize from today forward.
Now back to the junk bucket. When you do find you need dig into the coffee can full of assorted junk, you sort the easy stuff as it comes out. Don't let this turn into a dedicated sorting session, you have something you are on the hunt for, but if you have a lag bolt in the handful of junk you grabbed then toss it in the lag bolt bin, but don't pick through the little nails or bits of string. If you don't have a bin for it then put it back in the junk bucket after you find whatever you are looking for. 18 months from now (that's why you wrote a date on the junk bucket) spill that junk bucket into a cake pan, look for anything that you know you need and then throw the rest away. This is were you will be tempted to do some sorting. Its OK to cave to that temptation, but if you spend more than ten minutes hovering over that cake pan then you are being counter productive. Tell the OCD you to get bent because tomorrow it won't care.
Will you make a trip to the hardware store to replace something you threw away? Probably. But there is a good chance you would make that trip anyways because you couldn't find it. The key is to keep organized going forward, not to organize the past.
There are two kinds of people: Those who can extrapolate from incomplete data.
It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring - Carl Sagan
It is far better to grasp the universe as it really is than to persist in delusion, however satisfying and reassuring - Carl Sagan