A kind patron recommended this invention from Japan. It helps you not strip screws. π T-Shirts https://teespring.com/stores/ave
π Gadgets https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/AvEwerkz
π Gadgets https://www.etsy.com/ca/shop/AvEwerkz
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Bacot…ππ
You lost me when you called a JIS screwdriver a Philips.
I love the Vessel IMPACTA JIS (Japanese-Industrial-Standard) screwdriver πͺ. I bought one along with a 4 pound sledgehammer to get the infamous Honda JIS brake rotor screws out. Worked like a charm!
There are plenty of drivers that do just that and are more versatile
Valve lapping compound
I use the #3 for Honda rotors, no problem, right out
Does it chooch both ways so you can screw your friends.π³
I have a variety of Wessel and Anex screwdrivers …. but an Anex 3960 impact screwdriver … works very well !!! Also have a few Engineer nut / screw removing pliers and they are awesome !!!
Japanese motorbike owners greatly benefit from Vessel (everything).
I recently got one of these. In my initial testing, I can't notice any rotation whatsoever, no matter how hard I hit it, so I'm wondering if I got a defective one. Of course now I can't find any stuck or even very tight screws, at least not in anything sturdy enough that I can whack it nice and hard..
But seeing as Ave didn't seem to notice either until he realized the screw was loose, gives me hope that maybe that 12 degrees of movement is just too subtle to see with the naked eye.
I'm going to pick up a vessel 980 for kawasaki carb work today
It will damn sure bust stuck fasteners!
These work well. But I found that putting some torque on the handle while you hit the end with the hammer seems to cause it to work even better.
Not a bad looking driver either.
Others pointed this out but I'm putting in mine too. The Japanese don't use Philips so what you're dealing with is actually JIS. Japanese Industrial Standard. Not a huge difference but sometimes it's the smallest details that matter. Research JIS because we all will at one time or another work on Japanese machinery.
These are made for JIS screws. They look like Phillips BUT ARE NOT. They have a small dot on the head to indicate JIS standard. Using a Phillips screwdriver on a JIS screw will usually strip it if it is tight. JIS screws need JIS screwdrivers.
I dont feel like japan invented that.
I have a craftsman, that takes any bit. It's super heavy duty too.
Edit: wait what is the difference between this and a normal impact?
Just got mine delivered. Got the #2 and #3