Colin Jenkins:
Hello Alex.
With all due respects, my view is the exact opposite to yours! Slotted screws are all easy to deal with. Get to the awkward inner recesses of a cupboard, roof space or an elevated light fitting only to find find oddball screw heads......b****cks! Are they Phillips, Pozidriv or Torx? It sometimes even needs a torch to identify what's lurking in there. The correct driver is vitally important. Now we need a full suite of four different driver sets for no good reason. Rant over!
Regards,
Colin Jenkins.
I am in complete agreement with Colin. My tool belt with the essentials in it is too heavy to wear around my waist due to the number of different drivers in it. I do have a driver with a choice of insulated tips but the handle is large and uncomfortable despite my large hands. If I try to lighten the load the driver I have taken out is the one I find I need when I get to the top of the ladder or worse spent five minutes threading my way through roof trusses to a remote owner of an attic.
Don't get me started on the screws made of hardened cheese with malformed heads and threads.
The +/- heads are the worst, the proper driver cams out before the required torque, often destroying the head so I usually use a straight blade driver.
I never use the fitting screws supplied with accessories as they usually made from soft cheese but unfortunately I do not have the same choice the it comes to the screws for making the connections.
And how do you work out what driver and of what size is required for that screw at the bottom of the narrow hole where the spider has been busy and there is years of accumulated dust in it and the accessory has been fitted so that you cannot get your head in a position to look down the hole. Aaggghhhh
It was all so much easier when there were only slotted screws :)
I nearly always align the slots on accessories to five past seven and while I have ADD I do not have OCD :)
Colin Jenkins:
Hello Alex.
With all due respects, my view is the exact opposite to yours! Slotted screws are all easy to deal with. Get to the awkward inner recesses of a cupboard, roof space or an elevated light fitting only to find find oddball screw heads......b****cks! Are they Phillips, Pozidriv or Torx? It sometimes even needs a torch to identify what's lurking in there. The correct driver is vitally important. Now we need a full suite of four different driver sets for no good reason. Rant over!
Regards,
Colin Jenkins.
I am in complete agreement with Colin. My tool belt with the essentials in it is too heavy to wear around my waist due to the number of different drivers in it. I do have a driver with a choice of insulated tips but the handle is large and uncomfortable despite my large hands. If I try to lighten the load the driver I have taken out is the one I find I need when I get to the top of the ladder or worse spent five minutes threading my way through roof trusses to a remote owner of an attic.
Don't get me started on the screws made of hardened cheese with malformed heads and threads.
The +/- heads are the worst, the proper driver cams out before the required torque, often destroying the head so I usually use a straight blade driver.
I never use the fitting screws supplied with accessories as they usually made from soft cheese but unfortunately I do not have the same choice the it comes to the screws for making the connections.
And how do you work out what driver and of what size is required for that screw at the bottom of the narrow hole where the spider has been busy and there is years of accumulated dust in it and the accessory has been fitted so that you cannot get your head in a position to look down the hole. Aaggghhhh
It was all so much easier when there were only slotted screws :)
I nearly always align the slots on accessories to five past seven and while I have ADD I do not have OCD :)
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