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Plastic Trays For Drawers Money 6 Spaces

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Plastic Trays For Drawers Money 6 Spaces

2024-09-24 04:10:33

High quality plastic trays.

5
2024-06-28 01:58:48

These are just perfect for me for moving slides from trays to a much more compact yet searchable storage that can go in either file drawers or binders.

5
2024-08-02 07:33:31

6 out let. good.

5
2024-09-04 07:56:17

The Trays are nice and big. They are also very thick plastic and will last.

5
2024-07-13 01:33:45

Nice durable plastic trays, love them

5
2024-09-12 07:14:54

These trays appear to be good quality, with thick sturdy plastic.

5
2024-07-16 06:39:19

I have 4 of these. They took the place of random storage in plastic bags and the bottom of drawers. I like them because they are waterproof and secure, yet easy to open without breaking a fingernail, unlike some other competitors. Not expensive and highly recommended.

5
2024-05-13 08:16:17

I don't know how they do it for the money! This exceeded expectations and is more rigid and solid than I expected. I have it loaded up with some heavy drawers and a rack mounted PC, etc. It is certainly up for the task and I imagine this will be in service for years to come!

5
2024-08-05 02:20:45

This is a very sturdy tray. It feel very high quality. It is NOT thin and brittle plastic, but rather a thicker kind-of denser plastic, which means (I think) it will not crack. Which is perfect. After all, who wants to pay 45 bucks for something that cracks. I used it to develop 20x24 paper, which I had never done, and was unsure of the best way to proceed. I didn't want to buy three $45 trays. So instead, I bought just the one, and used a ONE TRAY METHOD. Simply put, you keep your developing chemicals in one gallon buckets, and simply pour them (one at a time) onto the print, and then empty them back into the buckets. The tray has a pouring spout in one corner which makes this easy. I placed the bucket in a sink, in order to control what little might slash out. By the way... one gallon fills up this tray to a depth of 3/8 inch or so, which is perfectly fine. These trays have high sides, so it is very easy to gently rock the tray up and down, producing a gentle wave that washes over the print. It's actually very relaxing to do. When you rock smaller trays, they tend to splash... but not this tray. Given the high cost of 20x24 paper, I assume people are doing only one print at a time... and taking their time... and being careful. Which means using a one tray method is not so limitiing as it seems. So anyway... this was an excellent purchase.

5
2024-07-24 05:41:30

Caution: If you have your Ninja V in a cage, it will not fit in the pre-cut plastic spaces.

5