Thread
:
Screw Extractor for tiny laptop screws?
View Single Post
#
9
Posted to alt.home.repair
AZ Nomad[_2_]
external usenet poster
Posts: 944
Screw Extractor for tiny laptop screws?
On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 11:11:53 -0400,
wrote:
On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 09:52:01 -0500, AZ Nomad
wrote:
On Tue, 7 Oct 2008 04:57:23 -0700 (PDT),
wrote:
On Oct 7, 6:35*am, Ron Hardin wrote:
ransley wrote:
On Oct 7, 3:00 am, Ron Hardin wrote:
I've stripped two of the screws holding the hard
drive in my laptop (apparently lock-tite'd, from
the crack! noise the other two made when unscrewed
in my best philips screwing technique). *(The chat
agent on the line unhelpfully had just asked me to
try removing the HD and memory, which is the rough
equivalent in this model of ``remove roof and
temporarily set aside'' for home repairs, as you
have to remove the screen and keyboard to get at
the memory. *It must have been a little chat-agent
joke. *Anyway that project stopped when the screws
stripped.)
I take it the next step is a screw extractor,
which I see too large a variety of to make a
choice. *What's the most probably successful kind
of screw extractor? *I have no experience with
extractors. *I'd experiment, but would like to get
it done as neatly as possible on the first try.
Very tiny philips screw. *A 3/32 drill fits in the
hole left by the other, removed, screws.
--
On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
If they are not broken but just stripped and cant catch a thread maybe
crazy glue the screwdriver to the screw then pull up to catch the
thread , use a bit of alcohol or laquer thinner to clean screw and
driver so they bond, or *raise the screw with a knife while trying to
screw out to catch a thread first, since it wont come outr but turns
im guessing there is thread that just wont bite
It's the head I stripped. *The threads are fine. *I suspect it's
been lock-tite'd, causing the stripped head in the first place.
--
On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk.
Have you trying heating the screws with a small-tip soldering iron?
Heat should dissipate fast enough not to cause any damage to drive.
Otherwise, drilling-out would be another alternative.
No, but it'll melt the laptop case. The insert where the screw is set will come
free and there will no longer be a means to keep the laptop drive in place
other than duct tape.
A minimal level of manual dexterity, intellect, and skill is assumed.
If the insert comes out, glue it back in. That's hardly a problem.
If you had intellect, you wouldn't be applying heat to a plastic case.
Reply With Quote
AZ Nomad[_2_]
View Public Profile
Find all posts by AZ Nomad[_2_]