+1
I just remembered that the CM Phillips are ideal for removing stubborn oil filters
I've found that they make very good tent pegs, the handles make them much easier to both push into hard ground, and remove when you're finished. Only detriment is they weigh more than the bent aluminum wires furnished with the tent.
Threads like this make me remember that we have a wide range of demands for our tools across the membership. The same tools that will strip out virtually the first time I use them, last many years with others using them. Some that have high quality tools see little difference between them and the cheap ones they also use interchangeably. Some have never broken a socket, others warranty high quality sockets frequently. I guess that's the reason, along with price, that we have a wide variety of tools to choose from, in many different quality levels.
My dad has worked a lifetime with his 1960's Craftsman tools. His phillips screwdrivers are worn out till they almost don't work even on the easiest to remove fasteners, but he blames the cheap chinese screws that you get now a days; they strip out too easily. Most of the wrenches and sockets are still okay, but he babies them by trying to do most of his work with cheap chinese flea market tools "so the good tools won't wear out".
He has a real hard time understanding why I have the assortment of higher end quality stuff I do.
A couple years ago, he was visiting me and we went to a yard sale. They had a lot of tools, and one of the sleeper items was a small snap on tool box with a full set of 1/4" drive stuff in it. SAE and Metric, both regular and deep, driver handles, extensions, 2 ratchets, magnetic socket trays tailored to the sets (snap on supplied) and some misc. stuff. I paid $40 for it. He couldn't believe I would pay that much for a small socket set; he marveled that I didn't know you could get a huge set of 1/4, 3/8, 1/2 inch stuff at the flea market for half of that, and brand new instead of used.