I'm posting this on the 2-rail forum as I'm a 2-railer. There doesn't seem to be a more appropriate sub forum for the question. Please feel free to contribute suggestions without regard to what realm of O scale you happen to pursue. I know there are plenty of 3-railers and 3-rail scale modelers scratchbuilding too.
I have gotten into scratchbuilding in the past year or two. Along the way I of course have acquired an awful lot of strip styrene and sheet styrene raw material. I now have a highly disorganized pile of packaged and open stock that I would like to better manage. I am finding it a challenge to find a smallish storage cabinet with shallow drawers that can handle the various lengths of material yet fit comfortably in my small work space. Especially finding drawers wide enough to handle 24" strip and sheet stock. I'm finding mostly an either/or situation. If drawers are wide enough to accommodate the longer material, they are often also much deeper (say 6") than I would like. If I find a drawer cabinet that has the shallow drawers for paper stock or similar (like scrapbooking supplies), the drawer width is too narrow.
Does anybody have any suggestions. I live in a one bedroom apartment without shop facilities. I can possibly talk a friend into building a cabinet, but that is a last resort. I also may try to build something out of foamcore board if all else fails.
I have looked at tool chests/cabinets like one might find in a garage. They have nice flat drawers and a reasonable front to rear depth, but they are a bit pricey for what I need.
I have looked at flat files used to store blueprints and other large sheet material. Again, nice shallow drawers and the right drawer width. But usually 30" or so front to back. And very expensive unless I found one on Craigslist or similar. But really I'm looking for something 24" or less front to back.
I have looked at plastic stackable storage drawers from the likes of Rubbermaid and Sterilite. The only options I have found so far with adequate width have also been tall (6" to 8") and very deep front to back. Most offerings with the proper width are in the under-bed storage category, so are sized to maximize usage of that space.
What methods have other modelers come up with. I would prefer something with wide drawers that I could sub-divide to fit different sizes of material. I would prefer drawers as opposed to stacking trays. And I would like something with open tops as opposed to an array of tubes that one would access from the end.
I'm open to tips and suggestions.
Thanks,
Jim