On Thu, 13 Dec 2007 06:12:19 -0800 (PST), Mr Ian Primus wrote:
Well, I've made lots of progress on the eternal
task
of cleaning, sorting and organizing. I can now see my
I picked up a bunch of very small ziplock parts bags at hamvention, I expect you can find
them elsewhere. A sharpie note on the bag
saves me the time of looking for my glasses or a reading glass to locate things in a bin.
Resistors are lumped together by third band and wattage and caps are stored by value range
and sizes.
A bit larger bag is a good way to keep a postit or a reduced data sheet with unusual
items.
Again a sharpie note easily read without reading glasses, even if not needed now, will be
appreciated in the distant future.
If static is a concern then use static bags or anti-static foam.
If you label well, it does not mater if you use parts bins or shoe boxes as long as there
is an overall logic to the storage.
Some questions and related thoughts you need to conceder:
Are you sorting your collection for the future as a hobby ?
Parts or collectables, Once sorted how often do you expect to access them?
Parts or collectables, Collectables are displayed, parts are stored, most collectors have
both.
Are you sorting your parts to improve productivity of your current activities ?
In fact, I tend to use a binary search pile method with ageing piles getting moved to
boxes to be sorted someday as access to a given
pile drops from day to day, to just occasional, or more like never. These boxes are
identified by the topic of the origional pile or simply
by the chronologic age of the pile when it was moved to the box or bin. A move every few
years helps promote this process.
Do as I say and not as I do :-)
The other Bob