They already do…Job for Koken or perhaps Astro produce some proper design effort ones ... hardly any companies seem want make effort do proper innovative design/manufacture solve a few basic tool issues .
Would of thought snapon or a main industrial brand tap and die maker had it nailed a decade ago but they seem happy ignore easy innovations/tool upgrades ...

This is the way.I have both. Plan on using some pliers to remove the taps from the Irwin. No complaints with the Lisle ones yet. I use the Gator tap guides to make sure they go in square.
Cool, not seen that one, like to see them do a set of fairly slim sockets with grub screws
They offer two sizes of those, that is the larger.Cool, not seen that one, like to see them do a set of fairly slim sockets with grub screws
their adjustable one looks more compact than irwin but my home made one is more compact diameter .
Thats a good point. I think I will order them up and try out with my taps. If they are no go I will return. But hopefully will work out well.I have ~1 year old Lisle tap sockets that are fantastic. I use them regularly in the machine shop. They fit my taps (all modern production high quality tools) great, the taps don't fall out but don't take too much force to remove. Also, a tap will be considerably harder than the socket so a loose fit would wear the socket far more than the tap.
I use 8 point sockets for driving taps with a ratchet. Nobody wants them so they are often available for free just to get them out of someone's tool box.
Correct, they are not. An 8 point socket will not be a perfect machine fit but a square tap end isn't going to slip in the socket either, a lot of latitude here.The square drive on ANSI taps aren't typically nominal fractional sizes.