Ton ton
Well-known member
Is your favorite screwdriver torx, Robertson, Phillips, Pozidrive, slotted, or Vodka?
As far as the bit type goes, I do love Torx. It rarely slips or cams out, and having six sides makes it easier to position the driver. I wish Snap-On/Williams and Stanley would make Torx drivers for their Hardhandle and 100-plus lines respectively.
High Five for being in a similar time-thought continuum.Looking at the Wright 2020 catalog, I kinda wish they had a Torx screwdriver set. Because cushion-grip is a favorite screwdriver style for me, and I haven't bothered buying a full torx driver set before.
I have 100-plus Torx screwdrivers. Imagine my surprise to find out that they don't make them.A good Phillips is a great thing. Recently, I stupidly bought a whole set of Husky screwdrivers, which I don't need at all. They are the old-style Western-Forge drivers, that are similar to the Craftsman drivers. They are decent, but like the last WF Craftsman drivers I bought, the #2 Phillips doesn't fit. I goes in a couple of millimeters, but not nearly enough to engage the screw. Any real torque would damage the screw or the driver. I will have to file it to get it to fit. WF should have stuck with wrenches, pliers, etc and left all the screwdriver contracts to Pratt-Read. Not that it matters anymore.
As far as the bit type goes, I do love Torx. It rarely slips or cams out, and having six sides makes it easier to position the driver. I wish Snap-On/Williams and Stanley would make Torx drivers for their Hardhandle and 100-plus lines respectively.
A good Phillips is a great thing. Sadly, it doesn't exist except in the JIS form.A good Phillips is a great thing. Recently, I stupidly bought a whole set of Husky screwdrivers, which I don't need at all. They are the old-style Western-Forge drivers, that are similar to the Craftsman drivers. They are decent, but like the last WF Craftsman drivers I bought, the #2 Phillips doesn't fit. I goes in a couple of millimeters, but not nearly enough to engage the screw. Any real torque would damage the screw or the driver. I will have to file it to get it to fit. WF should have stuck with wrenches, pliers, etc and left all the screwdriver contracts to Pratt-Read. Not that it matters anymore.
As far as the bit type goes, I do love Torx. It rarely slips or cams out, and having six sides makes it easier to position the driver. I wish Snap-On/Williams and Stanley would make Torx drivers for their Hardhandle and 100-plus lines respectively.
I have noticed that the SBD Craftsman Phillips drivers fit perfectly. I prefer Klein, though.A good Phillips is a great thing. Sadly, it doesn't exist except in the JIS form.
Robertson really is the salvation of the trades. I'm in Canada so they're relatively common thankfully but I still see people trying to build decks and stuff with Philips for some reason though.I've always like Robertson screws (yea, I know the Hoi-Polloi call them square drive). I think we woodworkers were the first to adopt them in the USA due to McFeeley's Hardware bringing them in from Canada but an authentic Robertson screw on an authentic Robertson two piece screwdriver is truly a thing of beauty as it clings to the end of the driver. Also, few realize it but most electrical devices: Plugs, outlets all of that kind of stuff that you hook wire to uses a #1 square drive to fasten the wire to the device. Ever wonder what that square in the middle of the crappy Phillips/Slotted pan head screw was. Well it's a #1 Robertson. Believe me once you start using that when you're wiring you're not going back to Phillips or slotted.
I’ve worked on quite a few mobile homes that were put together with a combination of clutch head screws and narrow crown staples.Is a Clutch Head screw still a thing?
I remember having travel trailers in the late 70's and they were loaded with Robertson # 1 & 2 and clutch heads...
Flat head screwdrivers give me the most daily joy... seeing all the outlet and switch plate screws in perfect up and down alignment... it can only be accomplished with a properly sized flat head and a gentle twist of the wrist. Absolutely not the iron grip you guys have on your tool normally.Flat heads are the most useless screw drivers but most useful tools. They shouldn't even be up for consideration. Anyone that actually likes them as a screw driver is a straight up serial killer.
Philips is just a lousy design that has had way too much effort put into making it not terrible.
Allen been growing on me lately but obviously they don't really work well for anything that can't accommodate the insertion depth.
I think Robertson is my favorite general purpose design for larger stuff and torx for tiny stuff like in electronics.
I want them to issue a fatwah on Phillips.
Apparently it was a result of early assembly line production. Workers would use power tools to screw in, and as soon as it cammed out, they moved on to the next one. It was probably a bit crude by today's standards, but it worked. These days, with Phillips being everywhere, it's important to get a high quality, well-machined screwdriver or bit. It makes all the difference.Vodka (), followed by torx. Robertson is fine as well. hex sockets are OK as well...
Anything with a "phillips" profile is, IMO worthless... I've been told that phillips are designed to cam out; for the life of me, whoever thought up that should be shot. Both the screws (what good are they if you can't get them back out? May as well be rivets you have to cut off) and the bits (that break or cam themselves out as well, and cam out otherwise fine screw heads once the bit starts to wear)... and I don't buy the JIS phillips are somehow special - I can't count the JIS phillips that I have had to use a JIS impact driver to try to get out, followed by a non-JIS drill and/or chisel...
I like them when they are done right. Klein actually machines the tips, instead of just stamping and grinding them. Also, a good hollow-ground driver, that is *properly sized* is a joy to use. They stay in place much better, and don't damage the screw.Flat heads are the most useless screw drivers but most useful tools. They shouldn't even be up for consideration. Anyone that actually likes them as a screw driver is a straight up serial killer.
Philips is just a lousy design that has had way too much effort put into making it not terrible.
Allen been growing on me lately but obviously they don't really work well for anything that can't accommodate the insertion depth.
I think Robertson is my favorite general purpose design for larger stuff and torx for tiny stuff like in electronics.
I still occasionally see Clutch drivers, specifically the G type, but I rarely encounter the screws.Is a Clutch Head screw still a thing?
I remember having travel trailers in the late 70's and they were loaded with Robertson # 1 & 2 and clutch heads...
BMW uses T40 on their suspension bolts. I seriously wonder if any of these engineers have seen a car outside their labs. Rust and dirt must be things they've only read about in text books and are completely solved by speccing a zinc coating I guess.Torx is fine for small stuff, but leads to a near-certain nightmare on larger fasteners. Stir in normal corrosion, and there's no way on earth that stupid suspension bolt with a 10mm thread and stupid shallow T50 button head has the slightest prayer of budging. Just go straight to the drill.
Yeah, I'm lookin' at YOU, Ford.
I stand by what I said. Ever watch American Psycho? The business card scene? That's how I'm imagining you right now.Flat head screwdrivers give me the most daily joy... seeing all the outlet and switch plate screws in perfect up and down alignment... it can only be accomplished with a properly sized flat head and a gentle twist of the wrist.
For screws Torx, but not Torx for bolts.
If you are a engineer reading this, if it's 6mm or larger use a hex head or if needed for room a 12pt head.