I find that small compartment boxes are an efficient way to store small screws, bolts, and nuts, along with some other small parts. This is a mobile solution too, as a nylon tool bag can fit quite a few of them (my DeWalt DCBAG3 can carry up to 20).
Flambeau used to make them, but changed the design and now makes tackle boxes with different compartment sizes. They are not as good as before, in my opinion. What I buy now days are Westward 2HFR3 9" x 4.5" 18 compartment boxes that I pick up at Grainger Industrial Supply.
While convenient, these boxes are not without deficiencies, some of which I will try to address with this Printables entry.
Tolerances are everything, especially with the lids. Use X-Y adjustment in the slicer software to slightly increase or decrease the size of the lid. A proper fitting lid should slide in and out with little effort, but have enough friction not to open on its own.
If a lid is still slightly too tight, you may want to take fine sandpaper and rub the edges and the corners of the lid against it. I used grit 1000, but grit 400 will probably work too and is more readily available.
That said, I will upload several lids, with different tolerances. For example, a lid with 0.1 mm tolerance means that 0.1 mm is subtracted from the lid's horizontal dimensions. You can test print each one to roughly understand what tolerance do you need to start with, and later do a fine X-Y adjustment yourself. I find that for my printer I need 0.11 mm or 0.12 mm tolerance, depending on the filament.
Pull-out boxes have fillets at the bottom to fit the contour of the compartment box. This is not the best design from the 3D printing perspective, but the fillets do not have to be and look perfect.
Dividers can be printed up side down on a raft.
Imported from Thingiverse. No changes.
https://www.thingiverse.com/thing:3956826
https://cad.onshape.com/documents/85c6304cced501c56cc5f927/
Category: Tool Holders & Boxes
The author marked this model as their own original creation. Imported from Thingiverse.