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#1
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Posted to alt.home.repair,rec.woodworking
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![]() For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John |
#2
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 07:11:32 -0500, John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. Buy yourself a magnetizer/demagnetizer. http://www.atlas-machinery.com/produ...r-Demagnatizer |
#3
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John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John Try here. Watch for line wrap. I have one over a foot long but I've had it for years and have no Idea where I got it. http://www.harborfreight.com/catalog...+bit+extension -- Gerald Ross Everyone must row with the oars he has. |
#4
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On 12/10/2011 7:45 AM, Dave wrote:
On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 07:11:32 -0500, wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. Buy yourself a magnetizer/demagnetizer. http://www.atlas-machinery.com/produ...r-Demagnatizer That is interesting, may give it a try. Thanks, John |
#5
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Get rid of the Philips tip. It is a contradiction of your mission.
----------------------- "John" wrote in message ... For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John |
#6
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On 12/10/2011 6:11 AM, John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John I've never had a problem finding long magnetic bit extensions. For a really long one, you may have to visit one of the local industrial supply houses but 6" bit extensions are common at the big box home improvement stores. If you must have a long magnetic holder, use a sliding chuck release type to extend a shorter magnetic tip holder. https://encrypted.google.com/webhp#h...w=1024&bih=588 http://preview.tinyurl.com/cyjxbcp TDD |
#7
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 08:18:39 -0500, Gerald Ross
wrote: John wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John Try here. Watch for line wrap. I have one over a foot long but I've had it for years and have no Idea where I got it. http://www.harborfreight.com/catalog...+bit+extension Caveat Emptor. I got a couple of the shorter ones, maybe 3", but didn't pay much attention to it until it broke on the first impactor job. My old ones were chromed steel or stainless. The new HF jobs have aluminum ferrules. They're plenty strong for manual or electric screwdriving, but they fail instantly upon entering the impact stage. These look to be chromed, so they might be good, but do look out. -- A sound mind in a sound body is a short but full description of a happy state in this world. -- John Locke |
#8
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In ,
John typed: On 12/10/2011 7:45 AM, Dave wrote: On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 07:11:32 -0500, wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. Buy yourself a magnetizer/demagnetizer. http://www.atlas-machinery.com/produ...r-Demagnatizer That is interesting, may give it a try. Thanks, John Works fairly well here but a pain to get out, plug in, unplug, etc.. I took an old woofer speaker apart for the magnet ring and keeping whatever I want magnetized stuck to that seems to do a better job and with a couple swipes gives a more magnetized part. It's stuck to the hood on my drill press & I just reach up and put whatever I want onto it. Bits, screwdrivers, "pickers" for digging around in the misc cans, things like that. No cords to fuss with & easy to take along with you to another site to work if you want to. HTH, Twayne` |
#9
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In ,
m II typed: Get rid of the Philips tip. It is a contradiction of your mission. Sounds like that's a little ill concieved; most equipment still seems to have Phillips #1, #2 or Reed & Prince heads. ----------------------- "John" wrote in message ... For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John |
#10
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Nobody cares what equipment with planned obsolescence uses for screws
and bolts. Did you read the OP ------------------------ "Twayne" wrote in message ... In , m II typed: Get rid of the Philips tip. It is a contradiction of your mission. Sounds like that's a little ill concieved; most equipment still seems to have Phillips #1, #2 or Reed & Prince heads. ----------------------- "John" wrote in message ... For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John |
#11
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On 12/10/2011 7:11 AM, John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John I presume that a magnetic bit holder just refers to how the bit is retained in the holder and doesn't automagically magnetize the bit to hold the screw? Like this one: http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com...er-201095.aspx John |
#12
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On 12/10/2011 10:15 AM, John wrote:
On 12/10/2011 7:11 AM, John wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John I presume that a magnetic bit holder just refers to how the bit is retained in the holder and doesn't automagically magnetize the bit to hold the screw? Like this one: http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com...er-201095.aspx John or this one: http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com....aspx#features |
#13
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I believe you are looking for a bit extender. I have seen them at HFT,
Sears and a small real HW store (where I got mine). I expect HD, Lowe's, Ace HW, Maynards, et al would have them as well. Mike in Ohio On 12/10/2011 07:11 AM, John wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John |
#14
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On 12/10/2011 4:11 AM, John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John 12": http://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-12-LONG-1-4-HEAD-SCREW-BIT-TIP-HOLDER-EXTENSION-/260805144935?_trksid=p3284.m263&_trkparms=algo%3DS IC%26its%3DI%26itu%3DUCI%252BIA%252BUA%252BFICS%25 2BUFI%26otn%3D21%26pmod%3D180757547894%26ps%3D54#h t_500wt_1054 6": http://www.harborfreight.com/6-inch-magnetic-hex-bit-extension-30009.html The 6" extensions are very common, the 12" extensions not as common. |
#15
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 07:11:32 -0500, John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. I've found that too often when I need a long driver extension, it's also in a tight space so extensions just get in the way. I have long driver bits for these times. I have several extensions (from various kits over the years) but they are seldom used. |
#16
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John wrote:
For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Try "drill extension". I picked up a 12" one (Vermont American) from my locally owned ACE store a couple years ago for a very reasonable price; Amazon (among others) also sells them online. Jon |
#17
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On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 13:56:31 -0500, "
wrote: I've found that too often when I need a long driver extension, it's also in a tight space so extensions just get in the way. I have long driver bits for these times. I have several extensions (from various kits over the years) but they are seldom used. I sometimes use a "magnetizer demagnetizer" tool for an occasional screw. http://d1hsxkpnft2izn.cloudfront.net/image.aspx/media/images/products/22219.jpg-395x395 |
#18
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Twayne wrote the following:
In , John typed: On 12/10/2011 7:45 AM, Dave wrote: On Sat, 10 Dec 2011 07:11:32 -0500, wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. Buy yourself a magnetizer/demagnetizer. http://www.atlas-machinery.com/produ...r-Demagnatizer That is interesting, may give it a try. Thanks, John Works fairly well here but a pain to get out, plug in, unplug, etc.. I took an old woofer speaker apart for the magnet ring and keeping whatever I want magnetized stuck to that seems to do a better job and with a couple swipes gives a more magnetized part. It's stuck to the hood on my drill press & I just reach up and put whatever I want onto it. Bits, screwdrivers, "pickers" for digging around in the misc cans, things like that. No cords to fuss with & easy to take along with you to another site to work if you want to. HTH, Twayne` Are you talking about the same magnetizer/demagnetizer? plug in, unplug. The one referenced above says "No batteries or electrical required". -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ |
#19
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John wrote the following:
On 12/10/2011 7:11 AM, John wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John I presume that a magnetic bit holder just refers to how the bit is retained in the holder and doesn't automagically magnetize the bit to hold the screw? Wrong. The magnetic bit extender transfers the magnetism to the bit. I can pick up screws with the end of the bit when it is in the extender. Like this one: http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com...er-201095.aspx John -- Bill In Hamptonburgh, NY In the original Orange County. Est. 1683 To email, remove the double zeroes after @ |
#20
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On 12/11/2011 12:06 PM, willshak wrote:
John wrote the following: On 12/10/2011 7:11 AM, John wrote: For hard to reach places where your hand may not fit into to hold the screw on the tip of the driver. 6" to 12" would be great for common screw types. I pretty much stick to phillips but a set of differing screw head types would be nice to have around. Tried a Google search without results, obviously I am not asking the right questions. The responses I get are either non-magnetic or Rube Goldberg contraptions. Thanks, John I presume that a magnetic bit holder just refers to how the bit is retained in the holder and doesn't automagically magnetize the bit to hold the screw? Wrong. The magnetic bit extender transfers the magnetism to the bit. I can pick up screws with the end of the bit when it is in the extender. Like this one: http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com...er-201095.aspx John Great! One more question, which of the following two would you recommend? http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com....aspx#features -or- http://power-tools.hardwarestore.com...er-201095.aspx I am leaning toward the extendable one but thinking the other would probably be more reliable. Thanks, John |
#21
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