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  • organize
  • bins
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Related

Organizing Components

nick123
nick123 over 8 years ago

Does anyone know of a good way to organize resistors or other components in those bins you hang on the wall?

My system is messy and not very good and I want to improve it so I can quickly find a given resistor value at any time.  Any Ideas?

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Top Replies

  • rachaelp
    rachaelp over 8 years ago +4 suggested
    For standard sizes of SMD resistors and capacitors I buy SMD lab kit books. So I have an 0603 resistor kit, an 0805 resistor kit and a 1206 resistor kit in E24 series values. These kits contain strips…
  • shabaz
    shabaz over 8 years ago +3 suggested
    I don't organize wired resistors at all, I just chuck them all in a large envelope (about 1000 in there on their carrier tapes) and tip it out and manually search when needed. It wastes little time, and…
  • Jan Cumps
    Jan Cumps over 8 years ago +3 suggested
    I use a single binder with envelopes. I write component info on the envelopes. Nothing sorted - I spend more time sorting than flipping trough the binder (and you instinctively know where a component sits…
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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 8 years ago

    I don't organize wired resistors at all, I just chuck them all in a large envelope (about 1000 in there on their carrier tapes) and tip it out and manually search when needed. It wastes little time, and saves tons of drawers.

    The thousand resistors last for ages. You could glue/tape the carrier strip onto card in a book/ring binder  as an idea, for a neat solution. I think that would be my preferred approach if I had to do it.

     

    For surface mount passives it is a different story. Depending on amount desired to store, there are different options. I use small labelled containers, and then all the containers go in a larger case about the size of a thick paperback book.

    I do a similar thing for surface mount capacitors. It means I don't need to keep opening drawers, I have all resistors/caps at hand in their container boxes. Another option if you're buying from Farnell in (say) strips of 100 or more,

    is to keep them in their packaging and place it all in a long plastic container so you can thumb through it (as if their were music records) in order. Note that the printing on the labels can fade, so you may need to re-write it with a pen.

     

    For other components I do use component storage bins, but another technique I quite prefer is to just have a large box for discretes, another for ICs, another for opto, etc., and throw them all in there : ) It doesn't take long to retrieve what you

    want with this method. I also keep a spreadsheet so I roughly know what I have. Otherwise you end up with hundreds of small component trays and the organizing takes forever.

    This is just a personal approach, others may prefer other methods.

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  • shabaz
    0 shabaz over 8 years ago

    I don't organize wired resistors at all, I just chuck them all in a large envelope (about 1000 in there on their carrier tapes) and tip it out and manually search when needed. It wastes little time, and saves tons of drawers.

    The thousand resistors last for ages. You could glue/tape the carrier strip onto card in a book/ring binder  as an idea, for a neat solution. I think that would be my preferred approach if I had to do it.

     

    For surface mount passives it is a different story. Depending on amount desired to store, there are different options. I use small labelled containers, and then all the containers go in a larger case about the size of a thick paperback book.

    I do a similar thing for surface mount capacitors. It means I don't need to keep opening drawers, I have all resistors/caps at hand in their container boxes. Another option if you're buying from Farnell in (say) strips of 100 or more,

    is to keep them in their packaging and place it all in a long plastic container so you can thumb through it (as if their were music records) in order. Note that the printing on the labels can fade, so you may need to re-write it with a pen.

     

    For other components I do use component storage bins, but another technique I quite prefer is to just have a large box for discretes, another for ICs, another for opto, etc., and throw them all in there : ) It doesn't take long to retrieve what you

    want with this method. I also keep a spreadsheet so I roughly know what I have. Otherwise you end up with hundreds of small component trays and the organizing takes forever.

    This is just a personal approach, others may prefer other methods.

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    • Sign in to reply
    • Verify Answer
    • Reject Answer
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