Another reason I thought of all this has to do with my having to remove some hinges and latches from some old cabinet doors - these doors had about upteen coats of paint on them so it was quite a task - it was also away from my shop so I was wishing I had a brace with me. Why a brace? One sort of forgotten advantage of the brace is for the amount of torque that can be applied to a slotted screw using a flat-tip screw brace bit. Using a large brace (12" swing), plus with the amount of pressure you can exert on the pad, you can worry off just about any slotted screw - which is what these old hinges had under all the paint. As it was I managed to remove them all but it took much more time than it normally would have had a brace and flat-tip bit been involved.
So last night the thoughts of the day ran through my head and I started thinking about drivers and screws - this naturally (at least for me) got me thinking about different types of screw head-types and what I knew about the flat tip, Phillips and square drive. So this is what I knew (through anecdote, discussion, etc):
- The square drive and screw was actually patented by a Canadian named Robertson thus its called the Robertson drive in Canada and its ubiquitous in use north of our borders this drive actually pre-dates the Phillips drive and screw in the US.
- The Phillips drive and screw was invented by someone in the US who sold the rights to a company who marketed it under the Phillips name. Initially there wasnt a good way to manufacture the screw heard (and there are variations with up to 6 or 8 vanes/slots) so the patent pre-dates the actual manufacture by some years. I had also heard that the Phillips bit was developed for the manufacture of airplanes (something to do with the attachment of the aluminum skin the recessed head discouraged drag and the shape of the slots allowed for the head to cam out rather than the screw being over-torqued and the threads being stripped).
- According to what Ive heard, the Phillips screw and drive owes its use in the US to Henry Ford, who wanted to use a product in his vehicles that was patented and owned by a US company rather than one outside our borders.
- Its obvious in retrospect that the Phillips drive is inferior to the Robertsons drive due to the built-in design (the desire to cam out instead of stripping). Strange that its used on everything and has pretty much replaced the slotted screw and driver well it is easier to register and use than a slotted fastener. But why has it taken so long for the Robertson drive to gain popularity among US users? I first saw the Robertson screw being used by outdoor deck builders makes sense as the drive head doesnt strip the worst thing about a stripped head when building decks is that it takes off the coating that prevents rust once the head starts to go the coating causes rusty spots that are very un-slightly, in a very short time.
Next topic: the Monkey Wrench!
-- John
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