Storage

5/09/2010

I recently started upgrading my collection storage from cardboard boxes to plastic boxes. Most were underbed storage boxes, long, and flat. Since most of the collection is Roco Minitanks and similar vehicles they don't need a tall box. Many of my cardboard boxes had wooden shelving inside that allowed me to put two layers of models inside one box. With some of the Hot Wheels and Paul Heiser resin kits, the boxes could be pretty heavy. Since the cardboard boxes are in some cases as much as forty years old, I figured this new configuration would have to last the rest of my life. I am in my mid-50's so if these new plastic boxes last forty years, then I may have to do this again, when I am 95!

I purchased a couple resin / plastic storage sheds and I will put many of the underbed storage boxes in the sheds. Since the boxes will just stack on top of each other, I decided that I would weigh them and put the heavy ones on the bottom and the lightest ones on top. I used a digital household scale to weigh them. I then took a marking pen and put the weight in pounds on a paper sticker. The paper sticker when on the end of the box. Sort of like the bridge weight markings used on military vehicles. I should have used yellow!


These are the first few boxes inside one of the sheds. The sheds are eight feet across and ten feet deep. These boxes are 18" X 33" long and about six inches high. I put a blank 3 X 5 card inside each box at the end with the weight sticker to indicate the contents of the box.


I put the windows and the sky lights at the north side of the shed so the boxes would not be subject to direct sunlight.



The long boxes on one side and the other side has the boxes sideways so that I can move the boxes around inside the shed. I also have a few shorter boxes that are taller on the right side of the sheds too.

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