Features
- Adjustable and Removable Bins Are Color Coded for Easy Organization of Parts and Tools
- Includes 9 Small Red Bins, 9 Small Blue Bins and 12 Large Orange Bins.
- Durable Construction for Heavy Duty Use
- Removable Bins Easily Attach to Slat Wall Display Boads
- Bin Capacity Red Yellow Bins Hold 12 Cubic Inches and Blue Bins Hold 76 Cubic Inches
Specifications
Color | Orange-Blue-Red |
Size | 30PCS |
Unit Count | 30 |
A wall-mounted parts organizer with 30 color-coded, adjustable and removable plastic bins (9 small red, 9 small blue, 12 large orange) that attach to slat-wall display boards for storing small parts and tools. Durable construction suited for heavy-duty use, with two bin sizes providing approximately 12 and 76 cubic inches of capacity.
HORUSDY Wall Mounted Storage Bins Parts Rack 30PC Organizer Garage Plastic Shop Tool for Men's Gift, Blue,Orange,Red Review
Why I put this wall bin rack to work in my shop
My shop stays tidy only if every fastener has a home. After living too long with coffee cans and mismatched drawer boxes, I mounted the Horusdy wall bin rack and gave every screw, bolt, and widget a clear parking spot. It’s a simple system—two slat-style wall panels and 30 removable plastic bins—but it has reshaped how quickly I find things and how consistently I put them back.
What you get and how it’s laid out
The organizer ships with 30 bins in two sizes, color-coded to make grouping intuitive:
- 18 small bins (red and blue), each about 12 cubic inches
- 12 large bins (orange), about 76 cubic inches
The bins hang on included slat-wall style panels. It’s not a full slatwall system—think of these as compact rails with horizontal grooves. The bins lift off and snap back on easily, and you can shuffle their positions as your inventory changes. I use color as my first layer of organization (red for wood screws, blue for machine screws, orange for “odds and ends” that need more room), then add quick tape labels to the bin lips.
Capacity-wise, the small bins are good for a couple hundred #8 wood screws, wire ferrules, small anchors, and similar small parts. The large bins hold larger fasteners, plumbing fittings, electrical wire nuts, small paint accessories, and the like. They’re not intended for hand tools or power-tool batteries—that’s outside their comfort zone—but they shine for small parts.
Installation and mounting tips
Install is straightforward if you treat it like a small cabinet job rather than a knickknack. Here’s what worked well:
- Find studs. Even though the bins are lightweight, a fully loaded board adds up. I placed the panels so at least two screws hit studs. If you can’t line up studs, use quality anchors rated for hollow drywall or, better yet, mount a plywood backer to studs and fasten the panels to that.
- Level matters. The bins rely on a shallow lip to stay put. If your panels aren’t level, bins won’t sit flat and can feel sloppy. I marked my layout, predrilled, and checked level before tightening down.
- Leave hand clearance. Stagger rows so there’s a finger’s worth of space above each bin. It sounds obvious, but a tight layout can make the top lip hard to grab, especially on the smaller bins.
My kit included basic screws and anchors, which got me up and running, but I swapped in longer screws to reach studs. Either way, this is a 20-minute job with a drill, level, and tape measure.
Day-to-day use
In daily use, the system excels at visibility and speed. The shallow small bins mean I can see contents at a glance; I’m not digging through a deep drawer for one more drywall anchor. The larger bins are great for “bulky smalls” that tend to get orphaned—compression fittings, lag bolts, hose clamps—while still being easy to pull off the wall and bring to the bench.
The bins detach and rehang smoothly. There’s enough bite in the slat to keep them from bouncing off if you bump the board, but they release with a quick lift. I often pull two or three bins for a project, line them up on the bench, then click them back when I’m done.
Color coding actually pulls more weight than I expected. I glance for a color first, then read my label. It’s a simple cognitive shortcut that speeds up repetitive tasks.
Build quality and durability
The panels and bins are molded plastic. On the spectrum of storage hardware, this sits squarely in the “light-to-medium duty” camp. The plastic is rigid enough for its intended loads, and the hooks haven’t deformed with normal use. I’ve loaded the larger bins with heavy fasteners without trouble, but I avoid overstuffing to keep the slat lips from bearing too much torque.
A couple of pragmatic observations:
- Plastic flex: If you pack a bin with dense, heavy parts and lift from the front edge, you’ll feel a bit of flex. It hasn’t cracked on me, but it’s a reminder to keep within its small-parts brief.
- Rail straightness matters: If your wall isn’t flat or the panel bows during install, the bin engagement suffers. Don’t overtighten a single screw before all are started.
- Surface scuffing: The glossy plastic scuffs with use. It’s cosmetic, and the bright colors still read well.
If you need a stockroom-grade, all-metal bin rail that shrugs off abuse, this isn’t that. If you want a practical, modular way to get tiny pieces out of drawers and into view, it’s a solid fit.
Capacity trade-offs: shallow bins are a feature and a limit
The smaller bins’ 12 cubic-inch capacity is both the charm and the constraint. Shallow depth makes identification easy and prevents the “parts pile” from becoming a mess. But it also means you’ll outgrow a bin quickly if you try to store oversized toggles, long bolts, or specialty fasteners that don’t nest well. The larger bins help, but even those top out at “large small parts,” not tools.
Plan your layout around how you actually build:
- Frequent, small items in the small bins at eye level
- Bulky smalls in the larger bins at waist height
- Overflow or job-specific assortments in a separate container or a second panel set
If you anticipate lots of new categories, consider leaving a few bins empty to avoid constant reshuffling.
Ergonomics and labeling
I appreciate that each bin has a flat face suitable for tape or label stock. I used painter’s tape while I tuned the layout, then replaced with printed labels once things settled. The color palette (red, blue, orange) is bright enough to code by type without feeling chaotic. If your shop aesthetic leans muted, that’s the trade-off for quick visual sorting.
Reach-in is comfortable as long as you leave a bit of vertical spacing during install. The small bins are easiest to pinch from the top lip; the large bins have more room to grasp from underneath.
Where this organizer fits best
- Garages and home shops needing fast access to small hardware
- Maker spaces and craft rooms with lots of tiny consumables
- Electronics benches for connectors, heat-shrink, jumpers, and adapters
- Van or trailer walls, provided you mount to plywood and avoid overloading
Where it’s less ideal:
- Storing hand tools or heavy parts (use hooks, shelves, or a metal bin rail)
- Long items that exceed the bin depth
- Environments where bins will be regularly yanked sideways or used as steps (yes, I’ve seen it)
Comparisons and alternatives
Versus drawer cabinets: Drawer units protect from dust and can store longer items, but you lose instant visibility and the ability to carry a bin to the bench. I reach for this rack far more often for daily tasks.
Versus full slatwall with accessory bins: A full slatwall is more flexible and stronger when installed on a large panel, but it’s pricier and more involved. This rack delivers 80% of that function in a compact footprint with minimal install.
Versus metal bin rails: Metal rails and steel bins carry heavier loads and tolerate abuse, but they cost more and are overkill for most homeowner shops. If you’re in a commercial environment or tossing heavy hardware around, metal is the safer bet.
The bottom line
The Horusdy wall bin rack solves a specific problem well: keeping small parts visible, accessible, and off the workbench. Installation is easy with basic tools, the bins click on and off cleanly, and the color-coded layout speeds up both finding and filing. The trade-offs are clear—plastic construction, modest bin depth, and a focus on small items—but within that scope, it performs reliably.
Recommendation: I recommend this organizer for anyone looking to clean up small-part chaos in a home garage or light-duty shop. It’s a practical, modular solution that encourages good habits without demanding much space or time. If you need to store heavier gear or want industrial-grade hardware, look to metal rail systems. For everyday screws, bolts, fittings, and consumables, this rack is an easy win.
Project Ideas
Business
Countertop Upsell Display for Retail
Use the rack behind a service counter to showcase commonly forgotten small items (screws, batteries, fuses, replacement parts). Pre-fill color-coded bins with single-use packs and price them for impulse purchases. Track top sellers and rotate contents seasonally to boost average transaction value.
Pop-up Repair/Parts Kiosk
Build a branded, slat-wall display around the rack and stock it with frequently used parts for mobile services (phone chargers, bike tubes/patches, appliance fuses). Operate at markets, trade shows or farmers’ markets offering quick fixes — charge for parts + service and sell spare parts retail from the rack.
Subscription Kit Assembly Station
Use the bins as a pick-and-pack staging system for small subscription or craft kits. Assign each bin to a specific component for fast assembly line packing. The removable bins make quality checks and inventory refills quick, reducing assembly time and labor costs for monthly kit businesses.
Workshop Rental & Organization Service
Offer pre-organized bin walls for event organizers, makerspace classrooms or corporate team-builds. Provide rental, delivery and on-site setup of racks filled with the specific supplies for each workshop (electronics parts, jewelry findings, model-building supplies). Charge per event plus delivery/setup fees.
Custom-Branded Organizer Kits for Trades & Promo
Sell or wholesale custom-packed rack kits to contractors, tech startups and trade show exhibitors as branded gifts or starter kits. Offer options: empty branded racks, pre-filled maintenance kits, or industry-specific assortments. Price by kit complexity; offer volume discounts to corporate clients.
Creative
Modular Craft Supply Station
Mount the 30-bin rack above a craft table and use the small (≈12 cu in) bins for beads, buttons and findings and the large (≈76 cu in) bins for yarn scraps, larger tools or glue bottles. Color-code by project type (red = jewelry, blue = sewing, orange = mixed supplies). Add a small magnetic strip beneath the rack for metal tools and label each bin for faster workflow.
LEGO/Small-Toy Sorting Wall
Create a LEGO wall where kids (or adult builders) sort pieces by color and type. Use small bins for minifigs, plates and specialty parts and the large bins for bricks and baseplates. Add removable labels and a fold-down tray beneath for building space. This doubles as a tidy display and quick-access play station.
Seedling & Indoor Herb Nursery
Convert bins into a vertical seed-starting station: line the large bins with plastic liners, add potting mix and starter pots, and use small bins for seed packets, plant labels and fertilizer tabs. The color-coded layout helps stagger plant stages (seed, sprout, transplant) and keeps a compact footprint for windowsills or sunrooms.
Pixel-Art Wall Mosaic
Use the colored bins themselves as pixels to build a large-scale, removable wall mosaic. Arrange orange/blue/red bins in patterns or images, interchange bins to refresh the design, and use the removable bins to store extra paint, brushes and small supplies behind the artwork — functional decor for a studio or shop.
Jewelry & Miniatures Production Station
Organize findings, chains, clasps, tiny tools and partially assembled pieces in the small bins and larger displays/packaging in the big bins. Set up a labeled workflow (cutting, assembly, finishing, packaging) along the rack to speed small-batch production for craft fairs or online shops.