3x25mm, TX10

  • bluGill@fedia.io
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    16 hours ago

    Flathead is great. It is most flthead screwdrives that suck. Treat yourself to a parallel groud screw driver and you will change your tune.

    note that I said screwdriver note bit. Flathead must be driven by hand. With the right pilot hole this isn’t hard. In proffessional settings they demand the speed and process reduction from self tapping power driven screws but I’m not in that situation.

    • Steak@lemmy.ca
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      15 hours ago

      Even when driving by hand flathead suck. I worked as an electrical apprentice I have a lot of experience with every screw type. Flathead suck in almost every single application. The one saving grace they have is if the head gets covered in something like dirt or glue or silicone. It’s super easy to clean out the slot and use the screw again. If your Phillips or robby screw gets full of dirt it can take a while or even need a special pick to clean out the hole and get it going again. I’ve heard that on old ships this used to very important because the water would put grime on the screws and build up overtime. With big flathead slots you just use your screwdriver to clean out the gunk and screw away. I am Canadian and so love the robby. But it’s a bitch to clean if it gets full of shit too, not as bad as Phillips though. But the robby doesnt cam out, doesn’t strip. Lasts the longest by far, every other bit will be chewed after a couple months of electrical work in an impact. I can get 6 months to a year out of a high quality robby bit. Ten thousand plus screws. It also holds a screw well to get into hard to reach places.

      Idk which screw is the best. But flathead isn’t even in the convo.

    • Milk_Sheikh@lemm.ee
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      13 hours ago

      Nah. Even with a the correctly sized bit on a manual screwdriver it’s a pain. One hand drives the tool, the second is playing hand twister trying to ensure perfect axial alignment of the tool:fastener:workpiece interface. Plus it is terrible at ‘holding’ fasteners in place on the bit before insertion, even Phillips heads are okay at that when not magnetized.

      Unless you physically cannot fit a more complex head geometry on the fastener because it’s super small, we have better options nowadays.

      • bluGill@fedia.io
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        12 hours ago

        Sounds like you have never used a good flathead screwdriver. Most of them are cheaply made and so have that problem. With a good flathead screwdriver that problem doesn’t exist (they don’t need to be in axial alignment). I’ve had the pleasure of using a good flathead screwdriver exactly once in my life - even the expensive ones are typically made wrong and have all the problems you state.