When.com Web Search

  1. Ads

    related to: wall mail pocket size tool chest for sale cheap

Search results

  1. Results From The WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Organize Your Workspace With One of These Editor ... - AOL

    www.aol.com/consolidate-213000159.html

    Tool chests are the most practical way to keep your tools and your workspace organized for all of your projects. Here are some chests that work for workspaces both big and small.

  3. Henry O. Studley - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Henry_O._Studley

    It has been featured on an episode of The New Yankee Workshop [4] and is the subject of a May 1993 article in Taunton's Fine Woodworking and a popular wall poster. [2] When closed and hanging on a wall it takes up an area of approximately 39 inches by 20 inches with a 9 inch depth. [2] It opens to become a 40-inch by 40-inch tool chest.

  4. Toolbox - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Toolbox

    A middle chest, also called an intermediate chest, can be placed between the top chest and cabinet for extra storage. A side cabinet with more drawers can be hung from the side of a cabinet. A side locker can also be hung from the side of a cabinet; usually with a door that protects shelves or small drawers. Tool chest with wheels

  5. H. Gerstner & Sons - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/H._Gerstner_&_Sons

    H. Gerstner & Sons, Inc. is a manufacturer of wooden tool chests based in Dayton, Ohio.Started in 1906, it has remained family-owned. [1] Of more than twenty manufacturers building wooden tool chests for journeymen in the early 20th century, H. Gerstner & Sons is the only one to still exist.

  6. Wall box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wall_box

    The contract for wall boxes resided at this time with W.T. Allen & Co. Ltd. of London for the "B" and "E" size boxes and with Carron Co. of Falkirk Scotland for the "A" and "D" sizes and remained with them throughout this reign. By this time, production of the type "C" and "F" size boxes had been discontinued.

  7. Relay box - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Relay_box

    The practice of using relay boxes has stopped or declined as volumes of mail have been decreasing. It is also being outmoded by the adoption of "park and loop" methods where a mail carrier completes a walking route from their nearby parked mail van. Although in decline, the US postal service confirmed that they are still in active use as of 2017.