I have a shelving structure that needs some organizing. It has lots of random stuff like computer mouse, cables, earbuds, headphones, papers, folders, binders, bottles, books. It's just a tower of horizontal floors with not organization whatsoever. So I've been looking at organizational solutions and came across gridfinity. I'm not totally into it because it's not an exact size, I might just print out other random bins I see online.
I'm open to any advice suggestions from you guys. Let me know in the comments below.
I have done some gridfinity stuff for my desk and I will say I really like it - especially the idea of the magnets in the bins / baseplates to make really cool modular organization bins.
The baseplates let you change things around and stick things together like legos vs having to make sure random STL files are all the right size to look good together, or designing everything yourself custom for your space.
That being said, for me, the main downside is also the baseplates. I know that's what makes gridfinity gridfinity, but it just feels like a lot extra to print. Like I have to create a gridfinity space, then I can start actually organizing things. I need to add some more bins... Oh wait, first I have to print a few more baseplates. I probably need to switch to some more minimal baseplates that will print faster and use less material when I am ready to expand my setup - I printed the gridfinity refined baseplates. The features are cool (press-fit magnet slots, optional thumbscrews), but I don't think it's worth it for me given the extra time and material required.
While the xyz site has the best technical specs you can find online, I can recommend Zach Freedman's original YouTube video about it as the best introduction to the what and why of the system.