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Wall-Mounted Screwdriver Holder
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Wall-Mounted Screwdriver Holder: A Solution That Stuck For me, a workspace and tools must be organized so that I never have to search for anything. Not in drawers, not in little boxes, not in a box inside another box. If a tool needs to be pulled out, unboxed, looked for—it’s probably not going to be used. In creative work, you need flow. The moment. And if you’re distracted searching for a tool—that moment is gone. Everything should be within arm’s reach. Always. That was the case with my electric screwdriver. A good, handy tool, but it never quite found its place on the desk. Sometimes in a box, sometimes on a shelf, sometimes just lying around—and each time I had to stop and look for it. Eventually, it sat unused for a couple of months. And it’s a genuinely useful tool. Not my first of this kind, but none had ever really fit into my workspace before. Now, finally, I’ve fixed that. How It’s Made My work surface is metal, and most of my mounts are magnetic. So it made perfect sense to use magnets for this holder too. Of course, if you want, you can screw it in instead—the base can easily be adapted for that. Totally up to your setup and creativity. The holder is built around a basic white base with magnets. Two Y-shaped positioning brackets hold the screwdriver in place at the top, keeping it aligned. The actual locking happens at the bottom, where there’s an automatic clip. It works flip-flop style: pull and it opens, push and it clicks shut. All one-handed. Effortless. Why Print It Separately The clip wasn’t perfect right away. The first version worked, but I wasn’t satisfied. Visually it looks almost identical to the final one, but the difference is real. The final version sits lower, grips tighter, and is more solid overall. Took some work, but I’m happy with the result. You might ask: why not just print all three parts together as one unit? Simple—precision. Even with a good printer and a 0.2 mm nozzle, PLA tends to melt into tight gaps. Especially on sm
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