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Tony Hwang April 7th 05 05:08 AM

Power screw driver
 
Hi,
My hobby is building lots of electronic kits and repairing neighbor's
TV, Stereo, anything
electronic for fun. BTW, I am retired EE.
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly used bits.
One will last long and give good service.
What would you recommend? Budget is flexible.
TIA,
Tony

m Ransley April 7th 05 09:15 AM

Top brands are Milwauke,Makita, Bosch,Porter Cable, Dewalt,Panasonic.
Mid line Sears, Ryobi, B&D , For small work a small screw driver is
nice one that is the size of a 2 d cell flashlight. Several have
removeable rechargeable packs so you can always have power B&D is one.
New tools are comming out every day you should go to a box store and go
online to check to see what each manufacturer offers. My old ones are
on -off trigger and have torque setting so you wont strip metal a
variable speed might be better. Try them at the store or you will never
know.


RicodJour April 7th 05 01:08 PM

Tony Hwang wrote:
Hi,
My hobby is building lots of electronic kits and repairing neighbor's


TV, Stereo, anything
electronic for fun. BTW, I am retired EE.
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly

used bits.
One will last long and give good service.
What would you recommend? Budget is flexible.


epinions.com is pretty useful, but the cordless screwdrivers aren't as
popular as the driver/drill so there won't be as many reviews to help
guide you.

http://tinyurl.com/6gmt6

Posting on an electronics newsgroup might help.

R


Al Bundy April 7th 05 01:19 PM


Tony Hwang wrote:
Hi,
My hobby is building lots of electronic kits and repairing neighbor's


TV, Stereo, anything
electronic for fun. BTW, I am retired EE.
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly

used bits.
One will last long and give good service.
What would you recommend? Budget is flexible.
TIA,
Tony


I've made my own for years because I didn't like what was available.
Now they have better products for you. I suggest you find something
with an angled handle, more like a gun shape. That feels more
comfortable and allows getting into smaller spaces.


cm April 7th 05 01:28 PM

Tony,

I use the Dewalt cordless screw driver. It seams to have the highest voltage
7.2 volts which helps with the torque. The batteries have a long running
time also. The Dewalt is $99.00 at most home centers. I would also consider
a Metabo or Milwaukee.

AZCRAIG

www.arizonavintagetrailers.com
Refresh - Repair - Restore


"Tony Hwang" wrote in message
news:ln25e.919676$8l.677738@pd7tw1no...
Hi,
My hobby is building lots of electronic kits and repairing neighbor's TV,
Stereo, anything
electronic for fun. BTW, I am retired EE.
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly used
bits.
One will last long and give good service.
What would you recommend? Budget is flexible.
TIA,
Tony




William W. Plummer April 7th 05 01:30 PM

m Ransley wrote:

Top brands are Milwauke,Makita, Bosch,Porter Cable, Dewalt,Panasonic.
Mid line Sears, Ryobi, B&D , For small work a small screw driver is
nice one that is the size of a 2 d cell flashlight. Several have
removeable rechargeable packs so you can always have power B&D is one.
New tools are comming out every day you should go to a box store and go
online to check to see what each manufacturer offers. My old ones are
on -off trigger and have torque setting so you wont strip metal a
variable speed might be better. Try them at the store or you will never
know.

I like the variable speed advice above. I find it very hard to start
screws with a standard electric screwdriver.

m Ransley April 7th 05 02:23 PM

I think Milwaukee can bend to any angle, you need a light torque setting
to not strip thin metal, I had an old P.C. where you could use
differenrt spring strengths to get the torque you wanted. Get a smart -
peak charger not the type that never shuts off and kills batteries.


Travis Jordan April 7th 05 06:13 PM

Tony Hwang wrote:
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly
used bits. One will last long and give good service.


For electronic assembly consider this one:
http://www.assemblytec.com/



Al Bundy April 7th 05 11:56 PM


Travis Jordan wrote:
Tony Hwang wrote:
I need a small handheld power screw driver kit with some commonly
used bits. One will last long and give good service.


For electronic assembly consider this one:
http://www.assemblytec.com/


He he he. My little home made job is 6" overall plus the perpendicular
handle. It has enough power to drive 300 X 2.5" deck screws and then I
just change the battery, but by then it's the end of the day anyway. If
they ever do make one like what I have they will charge plenty.


Tony Hwang April 10th 05 04:31 PM

m Ransley wrote:

Top brands are Milwauke,Makita, Bosch,Porter Cable, Dewalt,Panasonic.
Mid line Sears, Ryobi, B&D , For small work a small screw driver is
nice one that is the size of a 2 d cell flashlight. Several have
removeable rechargeable packs so you can always have power B&D is one.
New tools are comming out every day you should go to a box store and go
online to check to see what each manufacturer offers. My old ones are
on -off trigger and have torque setting so you wont strip metal a
variable speed might be better. Try them at the store or you will never
know.



Hi,
Thanks everyone, ended up buying small Bosch drill/driver. This one
ought to do it and some more.
Tony


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