I have two of those metal shelving units (or are they carts?), the ubiquitous chromed ones, that I use for tool storage. The bottom shelves on each unit have pull-out trays, and the top two shelves are, well, shelves. A long time ago I cut pegboard liners for the shelves so the planes and other tools that lived there wouldnt be resting on the metal racks. I cant remember why I used pegboard, but it probably had something to do with having it on hand.
Anychoice, it has worked fine, but has never really made me happy. Well, as part of the ongoing "get rid of stuff that doesnt fit/belong in my shop" offensive, I found a solution. I discovered some thin birch plywood that needed to earn its keep or hit the road. Well, Im not a fan of plywood, but it does have its uses and clearly this stuff was more aesthetically pleasing than pegboard, so I made the switch.
Not hard at all, since each fitted piece of pegboard was used as a template for the new liner. Here are some shots of the upgrade.
Before:


The bigger picture:

The tools:

The next pegboard to be removed will be the backing on my tool panels, which will be replaced by real wood. I already did the saw panel, which you can read about here and here, but its time to finish the rest.
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