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#42
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Jim Yanik wrote in news:Xns9B309D44781C9jyanikkuanet@
74.209.136.86: The Daring Dufas wrote in : AZ Nomad wrote: On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 10:00:09 -0500, The Daring Dufas wrote: 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. I've removed small stripped Phillips head screws with a Dremel tool. I first cut a slot for a flat blade screwdriver and if that doesn't work, it's time to play dentist. There are also the Alden brand Grabit screw extractors that work very well. http://www.aldn.com/grabit/ That's great if you're working on a car. Laptop's don't use #6-#14 screws. Do you know how big the screws holding in the hard drive are? Did you notice "Dremel tool" not hacksaw or die grinder? I can remove extremely tiny stuck screws with my Dremel tool. I have some cutting tips that are not much bigger than the head of a pin. TDD the screws are probably recessed into the case so you could not get a Dremel disc on the head without cutting into the case. are probably recessed Possibly something here would help? http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=nmial5&s=4 |
#43
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Red Green wrote:
Jim Yanik wrote in news:Xns9B309D44781C9jyanikkuanet@ 74.209.136.86: The Daring Dufas wrote in : AZ Nomad wrote: On Tue, 07 Oct 2008 10:00:09 -0500, The Daring Dufas wrote: 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. I've removed small stripped Phillips head screws with a Dremel tool. I first cut a slot for a flat blade screwdriver and if that doesn't work, it's time to play dentist. There are also the Alden brand Grabit screw extractors that work very well. http://www.aldn.com/grabit/ That's great if you're working on a car. Laptop's don't use #6-#14 screws. Do you know how big the screws holding in the hard drive are? Did you notice "Dremel tool" not hacksaw or die grinder? I can remove extremely tiny stuck screws with my Dremel tool. I have some cutting tips that are not much bigger than the head of a pin. TDD the screws are probably recessed into the case so you could not get a Dremel disc on the head without cutting into the case. are probably recessed Possibly something here would help? http://tinypic.com/view.php?pic=nmial5&s=4 What? No explosives? You're no fun. TDD |
#44
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vinny had written this in response to
http://www.thestuccocompany.com/main...ws-335140-.htm : I think I already replied, not sure why it didn't show up. Anyways did you try using super glue and and bond the screw drvier and the screw? ------------------------------------- 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. ##-----------------------------------------------## Delivered via http://www.thestuccocompany.com/ Building Construction and Maintenance Forum Web and RSS access to your favorite newsgroup - alt.home.repair - 317598 messages and counting! ##-----------------------------------------------## |
#45
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Anyway, did you try using super glue and and bond the screw driver and the
screw? As Rocky said to Bullwinkle, "That trick never works!" |
#46
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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. The Spin-it-out screw remover did the job http://www.amazon.com/Eazypower-8268.../dp/B000HE9VZY One screw took a tiny touch of 1/16" drilling first, but the other didn't even need that. It's built for #0 screws, is what was attracting about it. Just put it in a regular multi-bit screwdriver handle and unscrew. -- On the internet, nobody knows you're a jerk. |
#47
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Ron Hardin wrote in
: 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. The Spin-it-out screw remover did the job http://www.amazon.com/Eazypower-8268...ers/dp/B000HE9 VZY One screw took a tiny touch of 1/16" drilling first, but the other didn't even need that. It's built for #0 screws, is what was attracting about it. Just put it in a regular multi-bit screwdriver handle and unscrew. I was kinda hoping you would try some of my ideas that I posted.... 8-) Oh,well..... -- Jim Yanik jyanik at kua.net |
#48
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Ron Hardin posted for all of us...
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. Yes they have them at ACE Hardware. Heat it with a soldering iron as it's blue Loctite. A Dell? -- Tekkie - I approve this advertisement/statement/utterance. |
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