Garage Tool Storage Guide
Garage tool drawer slide guide.
Tool drawers carry dense weight, sharp edges, and frequent movement. Choose slide hardware by load, extension, lock control, side clearance, drawer stiffness, and release access.
Short answer
Use heavy-duty full-extension drawer slides for large garage tool drawers, especially when the tray carries metal tools, batteries, parts bins, or equipment. Locking slides are useful when the drawer should stay closed or stay extended during work.
Why tool drawers are different
A tool drawer can feel light when empty and become extremely heavy once sockets, wrenches, batteries, and parts are loaded. The drawer box also needs to resist twisting because a wide tool drawer can rack if the pull is off center.
Measurements that matter
- Closed cabinet depth and desired extension length.
- Drawer width after subtracting both slide thicknesses.
- Drawer box material, bottom thickness, and front stiffness.
- Real loaded weight, including bins, liners, and tools.
- Fastener head clearance inside the moving slide path.
- Release access with the drawer face, handle, and stored tools installed.
When locking slides help
Lock-out keeps the drawer extended while you select tools or work from the tray. Lock-in helps prevent movement in rolling cabinets, mobile benches, trailers, and work vehicles. If the drawer is stationary and light, locking may be optional; for heavy or mobile tool storage, it is often worth planning.
Related guide: Do locking drawer slides lock open and closed?
Common tool drawer mistakes
COREAX product match
COREAX heavy-duty locking drawer slides fit garage tool drawers, utility trays, mobile workbenches, and shop storage that need controlled full-extension access.
View Heavy-Duty Drawer Slides