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  • Author Author: dychen
  • Date Created: 10 Feb 2022 4:20 PM Date Created
  • Last Updated Last Updated: 1 Apr 2023 2:10 PM
  • Views 16447 views
  • Likes 13 likes
  • Comments 52 comments
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Recommended

Organize Your Workbench Wishlist

Cable Bundle with Toilet Paper Roll

After a while, everyone's workbench starts to get cluttered with nests of cables, tools, tiny components and more. Thankfully, there are a lot of products designed specifically for engineers and makers that help organize the loose parts and cables, and give your bench a tidy and professional appearance. Time spent searching for things will be cut down dramatically once everything has its own little compartment.

Cable Management

Over the years, engineers and makers typically build large nests of cables. Without proper organization, this can make any kind of troubleshooting a nightmare. Walking barefoot or on your knees on cables gets a little annoying after a while.

Label Maker

The first step in organizing cables is labeling. It can be a pain to print a label when you just want to plug in and go, but it eliminates the time wasted later when you need to trace each cable to figure where it goes.

Brady Label Maker

Label Maker

Barcode Scanner

Many label makers can print barcodes. If you've got a lot of cables, a barcode scanner makes it one step easier to figure out what they are.

Barcode Scanner

Barcode Scanner

Wire Marker

If you have a bundle or a snake connecting instruments with multiple channels, wire markers are a great way to go.

Wire Marker

Wire Markers

Clip-in Cable Marker

Cable marker

Cable Marker

Heat Shrinkable Wire Marker Sleeves

Heat Shrinkable Wire Marker Sleeves

Heat Shrinkable Wire Marker Sleeves

Cable Tie

Cable ties or zip ties are very handy; an inexpensive way to quickly bundle up unruly cables.

Cable Tie

Cable Tie

Cable Tie Tension Tool

Rather than doing it with your fingers, you can grab a cable tie tension tool. They cut and tighten in one press of the lever.

Cable Tie Tension Tool

Cable Tie Gun

Twist Lock Cable Tie

Twist lock cable ties bundle your cables with a convenient twist. They're also reusable, though I guess zip ties are also technically reusable (as long as the new bundle is smaller than the last).

Twist Lock Cable Tie

Twist Lock Cable Tie

Spiral Wrap

Spiral wraps make it easy to make a bundle out of a group of cables. This is something I've previously done using duct tape, which, of course, only sounds like a good idea.

Spiral Wrap

 Spiral Wrap

Cable Reel Holder

Cable reels are easier to store and manage than coils lying on the floor. If you deal with a huge amount of cables, cable reels make organization easier.

Cable Reel Holder

Cable Reel Holder

Cable Spool Rack

Most engineers and makers have to dig in their drawers to find the right cable spool; make things easy, and put them on a rack!

Cable Spool Rack

Cable Spool Rack

Jumper Assortment

Having a box that is divided into sections is much easier than having all your jumpers in the same shoebox (along with loose resistors and capacitors).

Jumper Assortment

Jumper Assortment

Component and Tool Storage

Speaking of resistors and capacitors, another source of of clutter is the large amount of tiny components lying around on every bench. Add surface mount components to that and we've got ourselves a serious problem!

Storage Cabinet

Every engineer or maker absolutely needs one (or twenty) cabinet with several small compartments. This saves untold hours in reading resistors.

Storage Cabinet

Storage Cabinet

ESD Cabinet

For ESD sensitive components, an antistatic cabinet is required.

ESD Cabinet

ESD Cabinet

ESD Bags

With some of the more sensitive components, it might be worthwhile to have some ESD bags on hand.

ESD Bags

Antistatic Bag

Portable Tool Case

Now onto our tools, because I've stepped on my pliers barefoot for the very last time! You've probably already got a cabinet for your tools, but a portable tool case is very handy for tools that you might need to carry around.

Tool Case

Portable Tool Case

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Top Comments

  • wolfgangfriedrich
    wolfgangfriedrich over 4 years ago +2
    Cables don't like to be folded, so coiling them up would be the natural way to store them, but they tend to not stay in that form on their own. Adding one or more "bread bag plastic clip" (I am sure there…
  • dougw
    dougw over 4 years ago +1
    I'm not really proud of my work spaces - less than 6 people in the world have ever seen this one in person, but hundreds of projects have been built here. This is where I solder PCBs and cables. If you…
  • ralphjy
    ralphjy over 4 years ago +1
    Although my work areas and computer desks are normally quite a mess, I do try to organize between projects - although there almost never seems to be any time in between . For components like resistors…
  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago in reply to dougw

    I envy your wire frame shelf. A couple of those in my space would give me space.. Hummm would probably block out the light from stuff piled on it.

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  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago in reply to beacon_dave

    I recall marking cables when we pulled them. After they were terminated on a panel, the panel got a label. DOne move on.

    One summer the company hired engineering students. The three students were assigned the job of putting coax connectors on the ends of cables. They were to snake the 200 or so cables under the floor to the rack and terminate them with a connector.

    The students on their own pulled all the cables to the rack in one bundle and cut them all to length. The supervisor returned to discover their progress and all the cable labels on the cable ends sitting on the floor. When their termination job was complete, their next task was to find the other end of the cable and label the end.

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  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago in reply to dubbie

    I recognize the pattern. What was currently used is closets and migrates away from the centre as it ages. The volcano of creation is in the middle with lava of product flowing away.

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  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago in reply to ralphjy

    I'm slack-jawed looking at your pictures. I have only scene that type of setup in a calibration lab. Is that carpet under the storage bins? Cement in the basement is more my condition:)

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  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago in reply to wolfgangfriedrich

    What a simple idea! Great share.

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  • colporteur
    colporteur over 4 years ago

    image

    The pictures are examples of how you hope your workbench never is. In my world, this is normal. They are not my benches but rather the benches I use at a friend's shop. I confess the condition of the bench on the left is 95% my doing.

    On reflection, it seems all desk environments I occupy seem to take on the clutter phase before I get frustrated and perform a purge. I suggested to a co-worker one time, that I should be more diligent in maintaining a clean desk. Their response was, “ I have seen your work output. If the condition of your desks achieves that level of quality in work and output, do not fix your desk. It is a fair price to pay.”

    image

    For my creative organizing for the bench contribution, I would have to say it is connector cables for the three voltage power supply outputs. These connector cables give me flexibility in connecting the power supply.

    The bench power supply is a combination of a 12VDC switching power supply and some buck-boost boards. It supports 3VDC, 5VDC and 12VDC. You can see it stuck between the two wall outlet switch panels at the back of the bench. Each output sports a cable with a female connector. The male mate connectors are wired with different adapters, pins for bread-board, set of probes, set of banana connectors...

    Since the power supply configuration doesn’t support a terminal for easy use, the connectors on each of the outputs enable fast changes of adapters on the ends. It is not pretty but very functional and has minimal costs. Maybe a power supply RoadTest review in my future might create a replacement for the arrangement.

    image

    Where is the mat in your bench organization focus? You know a silicone anti-static soldering mat. I confess if it wasn’t for the 14 X12 inch of blue silicon on my bench I wouldn’t have a clean place to work. It is the one free space that stays free.

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  • aspork42
    aspork42 over 4 years ago

    image

    I built a desk shelf from a tall shelf. Used the shelf pieces and threaded rod to have height adjustable shelves. Original unit was about 7’ tall and wobbly so I took it apart.

    have a cable organizer on the wall behind my monitors where the space is free and the monitors hide the clutter.

    I also use the Brady BMP21+ label maker for labeling wires as it has a really nice “self laminating” label stock to wrap around wires (not pictured here). I got it from E14 a while back as part of my shopping cart. Wonderful labelmaker and I highly recommend!

    I’m very fortunate to have gotten 6 computer screens when my former company was sold.

    imageimage


    I also built my desk up to the wall but have large holes every 16” to pass cables through.

    image

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  • robogary
    robogary over 4 years ago in reply to kmikemoo

    great idea using panduit to hang cables. 

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  • robogary
    robogary over 4 years ago in reply to ralphjy

    ralphjy - seeing that stack rack of bins is inspirational. You are my hero. 

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  • dubbie
    dubbie over 4 years ago in reply to ralphjy

    A very impressive amount of storage. I'd never be able to find anything, even if it was all labelled!

    Dubbie

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