During my industrial years we performed maintenance on cathodes, each with 52 stainless steel M8x10 flat-head hex screws mated with Heli-Coil in copper jacket. Due to extreme thermal load and dissimilar metals, cold welding was common despite spraying all fasteners with MolyKote.
Due to a legacy of abuse, Heli-Coils were in sad shape and replacing them in the damaged copper jacket was always iffy. We thus hand started all screws. There was a torque spec on the cathodes but no torque wrenches in the plant, so we hand finished all screws.
Solid Tee Stubby Bondhus were favored, but due to to the heavier weight, hand and forearm fatigue became an issue.
Loop handles were much lighter, but they truly flexed on fasteners that were galled. You could actually see the twist in 5mm hex key, exaggerated by the six inch blade. The "snap" when the fastener broke loose, was hard on the hands and wrist. I do not recall any stubby loop handled in the Bondhus and Eklind line-ups.
The tradeoff was the twist and the awkward 6" blades on the loop-handled vs the weight of the solid stubby Tee-handles.
Having moved into facilities maintenance, there is much less repetitive labor compared to line maintenance. This brought another perspective and solid-handled are the clear favorite.
Both styles have merit, each according to your current application.