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Monkey with a mouse
 
kstar's Avatar
 
Join Date: Oct 2000
Location: SoCal
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July 7: Happy Birthday Phillips

72 years ago Hank Phillips patented the "Phillips" screw driver and screw. Imagine a time before this invention . . .

Interesting story on something we all probably use very often.

Excerpt:
Quote:
1936: Henry F. Phillips receives patents for a new kind of screw and the new screwdriver needed to make it work. It changes the worlds of mass production and machine repair, not to mention your home toolbox.

Phillips was a Portland, Oregon, businessman who invented something to solve a problem that few home repair folk or do-it-yourselfers even knew existed. In those days, if you wanted to drive a screw into a hole, you just grabbed the right-size slotted screwdriver and did the deed. The only thing you needed to puzzle over was the size. Too big wouldn't fit; too small wouldn't give you enough torque.

So why do you now need to grab the right kind, as well as size, of screwdriver? It's enough to make you cross.

Phillips wasn't trying to make life with hand tools easier. He was trying to solve an industrial problem. To drive a slot screw, you need hand-eye coordination to line up the screwdriver and the slot. If you're a machine -- especially a 1930s machine -- you ain't got no eye, and your hand coordination may depend on humans.

The Phillips-head screw and Phillips screwdriver were designed for power tools, especially power tools on assembly lines. The shallow, cruciform slot in the crew allows the tapering cruciform shape of the screwdriver to seat itself automatically when contact and rotation are achieved. That saves a second or two, and if you've got hundreds of screws in thousands of units (say, cars), you're talking big time here.

And not only does a power Phillips driver get engaged fast, it stays engaged and doesn't tend to slide out of the screw from centrifugal force. Another advantage: It's hard to overscrew with a power tool. The screwdriver will likely just pop out when the screw is completely fastened.
http://www.wired.com/science/discoveries/news/2008/07/dayintech_0707

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Old 07-06-2008, 09:48 PM
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I have to disagree with the last paragraph. Too many stripped screw heads, but a lot better than a flat head.
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Old 07-06-2008, 09:49 PM
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I like a deep socket on the screw and a hardened screw top. Not many things worse than stripping a head after getting a screw half-way seated in hard material. . .

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Old 07-06-2008, 09:58 PM
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