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frontpage Posted by uhsarp | Staff • Last Saturday
frontpage Posted by uhsarp | Staff • Last Saturday

Fanttik E1 Pro Mini Electric Screwdriver with 24 Bits

$26

$50

48% off
Walmart
13 Comments 13,136 Views
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Deal Details
Fanttik Direct via Walmart has Fanttik E1 Pro Mini Electric Screwdriver with 24 Bits on sale for $25.99. Shipping is free w/ Walmart+ (free 30-day trial) or on orders of $35+.

Thanks to staff member uhsarp for finding this deal.

Features:
  • High and low electric torque of 0.2/0.05N.m and a manual torque of 3N.m.
  • With magnetic bits design, if you open the shell upside down, the internal screw parts will not fall out
  • S2 steel bits with sturdy hardened construction
  • Equipped with a 350mAh lithium-ion battery, the portable screwdriver can work continuously for up to 2 hours
  • USB-C port is convenient for you to charge at any time.
  • Includes: 1x Mini Electric Screwdriver, 1x Storage Case, 24x Precision Bits (PH1, 0, 000, 00; SL2, 1.5; T8H; T10H; T5H; T6H; T9H; H2, 0.7, 0.9, 1.5; T2, 3, 4; P2, 5; W1.5; Y0.6, 1; 2.3), 1x USB Type-C Charging Cable, 1x User Manual

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • Our research indicates that this offer is $43.98 lower (63% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $69.97.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by uhsarp | Staff
Community Notes
About the Poster
Deal Details
Community Notes
About the Poster
Fanttik Direct via Walmart has Fanttik E1 Pro Mini Electric Screwdriver with 24 Bits on sale for $25.99. Shipping is free w/ Walmart+ (free 30-day trial) or on orders of $35+.

Thanks to staff member uhsarp for finding this deal.

Features:
  • High and low electric torque of 0.2/0.05N.m and a manual torque of 3N.m.
  • With magnetic bits design, if you open the shell upside down, the internal screw parts will not fall out
  • S2 steel bits with sturdy hardened construction
  • Equipped with a 350mAh lithium-ion battery, the portable screwdriver can work continuously for up to 2 hours
  • USB-C port is convenient for you to charge at any time.
  • Includes: 1x Mini Electric Screwdriver, 1x Storage Case, 24x Precision Bits (PH1, 0, 000, 00; SL2, 1.5; T8H; T10H; T5H; T6H; T9H; H2, 0.7, 0.9, 1.5; T2, 3, 4; P2, 5; W1.5; Y0.6, 1; 2.3), 1x USB Type-C Charging Cable, 1x User Manual

Editor's Notes

Written by megakimcheelove | Staff
  • Our research indicates that this offer is $43.98 lower (63% savings) than the next best available price from a reputable merchant with prices starting from $69.97.
  • Please see the original post for additional details & give the WIKI and additional forum comments a read for helpful discussion.

Original Post

Written by uhsarp | Staff

Community Voting

Deal Score
+18
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Top Comments

Note that different fantikk models have very different torque power. This one seems very weak, probably good for toys and small screws on eyeglasses but not much on other stuff.

* E1 Pro (this item): high torque 0.2NM. Manual 3NM.

* E1 Max: high torque 3NM. Manual 10NM.

* S1 Pro: high torque 4.2NM. Manual 6NM.

Not sure what exactly "manual" means. I assume in Manual mode the motor is not helping you. You just use it as a normal wrench and it "clicks" when exceeding max torque…
This one does indeed have a super weak motor. Got it as a gift. Neat but very underwhelming. Have to undo screws manually, then switch to power. When fastening, can use a bit of power and then have to finish manually. The case is neat, but not really worth the price & hassle.

13 Comments

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Last Saturday
179 Posts
Joined Aug 2011
Last Saturday
samsonsu
Last Saturday
179 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank samsonsu

Note that different fantikk models have very different torque power. This one seems very weak, probably good for toys and small screws on eyeglasses but not much on other stuff.

* E1 Pro (this item): high torque 0.2NM. Manual 3NM.

* E1 Max: high torque 3NM. Manual 10NM.

* S1 Pro: high torque 4.2NM. Manual 6NM.

Not sure what exactly "manual" means. I assume in Manual mode the motor is not helping you. You just use it as a normal wrench and it "clicks" when exceeding max torque…
3
6d ago
264 Posts
Joined Nov 2009
6d ago
icerabbit
6d ago
264 Posts

Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank icerabbit

This one does indeed have a super weak motor. Got it as a gift. Neat but very underwhelming. Have to undo screws manually, then switch to power. When fastening, can use a bit of power and then have to finish manually. The case is neat, but not really worth the price & hassle.
1
6d ago
1,416 Posts
Joined Aug 2008
6d ago
WildRigger47
6d ago
1,416 Posts
Quote from samsonsu :
Note that different fantikk models have very different torque power. This one seems very weak, probably good for toys and small screws on eyeglasses but not much on other stuff.* E1 Pro (this item): high torque 0.2NM. Manual 3NM. * E1 Max: high torque 3NM. Manual 10NM. * S1 Pro: high torque 4.2NM. Manual 6NM. Not sure what exactly "manual" means. I assume in Manual mode the motor is not helping you. You just use it as a normal wrench and it "clicks" when exceeding max torque…
'Manual' torque ratings certainly would be the max torque that YOU are permitted to apply manually (with motor off) as any more torque than that would likely break the motor's speed reduction gearset. There's basically no way of knowing the exact amount of torque you 'think' you're applying manually, so basically it's saying this to say "Be extremely careful to avoid using too much twisting pressure manually" and to CYA.
It's saying don't go by any 'clicks', as one of those 'clicks' you hear may be the gearshaft driveline snapping/breaking.
5d ago
453 Posts
Joined Apr 2018
5d ago
bakersdozen12
5d ago
453 Posts
Quote from samsonsu :
Note that different fantikk models have very different torque power. This one seems very weak, probably good for toys and small screws on eyeglasses but not much on other stuff.

* E1 Pro (this item): high torque 0.2NM. Manual 3NM.

* E1 Max: high torque 3NM. Manual 10NM.

* S1 Pro: high torque 4.2NM. Manual 6NM.

Not sure what exactly "manual" means. I assume in Manual mode the motor is not helping you. You just use it as a normal wrench and it "clicks" when exceeding max torque…

I'd don't think the stats you listed are correct, at least comparing the pictured torque specs of the E1 Max on Amazon to the E1 pro at Walmart (this deal), they show the same torque specs across each model. Besides that the biggest difference is the max has a better gearing for reliability- planetary vs spur gear- planetary is 10x more reliable than spur according to Fanttik.
5d ago
304 Posts
Joined Apr 2008
5d ago
sr27
5d ago
304 Posts
Seems overpriced even at the 'deal' price.
1
5d ago
23 Posts
Joined Feb 2015
5d ago
phb
5d ago
23 Posts
Damn out of stock
2d ago
676 Posts
Joined Jan 2021
2d ago
JamaalJohnson
2d ago
676 Posts
Quote from sr27 :
Seems overpriced even at the 'deal' price.
At around $20, I don't see how the price is excessive.

But do tell...

Meanwhile I bought a freaking piece of plastic yesterday for $20. A single meal at many fast food restaurants here is pushing $20.

And a search of SD for similar screwdrivers shows this as a deal.

I have a variation of this one (slightly different) but I absolutely love it for taking apart and fixing electronics. My version allows me to turn up the torque to less than safe levels, so consider that the torque levels are generally for getting into small electronics. These aren't really for screwing bigger sized screws that you would use a standard screwdriver or power drill for.

Both this variation and the variation that I have are compared in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVXnf1uwuiY
Last edited by JamaalJohnson April 25, 2025 at 11:39 AM.
1

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2d ago
2,027 Posts
Joined Dec 2010
2d ago
xNico
2d ago
2,027 Posts
Quote from JamaalJohnson :
I have a variation of this one (slightly different) but I absolutely love it for taking apart and fixing electronics. At around $20, I don't see how the price is excessive.

But do tell...

Meanwhile I bought a freaking piece of plastic yesterday for $20. A single meal at many fast food restaurants here is pushing $20.

And a search of SD for similar screwdrivers shows this as a deal.
its worth what someone is willing to pay, certain people have a mindset of "i can get the same outcome with a fraction of the cost, so why spend xx" those people don't value their time and have nothing to do all day so it's fine for them. buy time=money, if the product saves me 5x time invested, or even an hour then its well worth it
2d ago
175 Posts
Joined May 2018
2d ago
GingerBear
2d ago
175 Posts
Quote from JamaalJohnson :
At around $20, I don't see how the price is excessive.

But do tell...

Meanwhile I bought a freaking piece of plastic yesterday for $20. A single meal at many fast food restaurants here is pushing $20.

And a search of SD for similar screwdrivers shows this as a deal.

I have a variation of this one (slightly different) but I absolutely love it for taking apart and fixing electronics. My version allows me to turn up the torque to less than safe levels, so consider that the torque levels are generally for getting into small electronics. These aren't really for screwing bigger sized screws that you would use a standard screwdriver or power drill for.

Both this variation and the variation that I have are compared in this video:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WVXnf1uwuiY

Because for $5 I can get a screwdriver set that works. It only has enough torque to work on my pc, excluding the case screws lol. I'll take a robust manual screwdriver over a really weak and fragile electric one any day.
1
2d ago
676 Posts
Joined Jan 2021
2d ago
JamaalJohnson
2d ago
676 Posts
Quote from xNico :
its worth what someone is willing to pay, certain people have a mindset of "i can get the same outcome with a fraction of the cost, so why spend xx" those people don't value their time and have nothing to do all day so it's fine for them. buy time=money, if the product saves me 5x time invested, or even an hour then its well worth it
Agreed, but... We should also discourage such messaging without explanation by asking for an explanation. Why does it seem overpriced?

To that person... We get it, it's not for you. But if everyone that it's not for posted, the forum would be full of junk. Then it becomes some sort of virtue signaling saying "Look at me, I'm too good for this".

Others might read that post and think there's a better price out there, or something. IMO, such posts really should explain why the price is too high so that others can be informed. When a "deal" is cold, we should know, and that's valuable. Just like when a deal is "hot" we should know.

If there's a better alternative, what is it? Perhaps cheaper is better and, a cheaper alternative is manually screwing. But now we have a comparison point 'automatic vs manual'.
1
2d ago
676 Posts
Joined Jan 2021
2d ago
JamaalJohnson
2d ago
676 Posts
Quote from GingerBear :
Because for $5 I can get a screwdriver set that works. It only has enough torque to work on my pc, excluding the case screws lol. I'll take a robust manual screwdriver over a really weak and fragile electric one any day.
Sure, I have a cheap free screwdriver (came with some electronic in the past) that does all PC screws and works excellent.

I agree with you that I wouldn't buy one of these electrics just for PC builds. I wouldn't recommend it just for that either as it would be overkill. Especially for how little PC building I do these days.

PC builds is just one use case. This is much more useful for taking apart and assembling small electronics. (My model also has a ton of all sorts of various bits). But I'll stay on that topic of PC builds...

I also have a ratchet screwdriver that's pretty nice that can work on PC builds as well. That's also overkill.

I do, however, sometimes use the electric screwdriver for some PC mods now and again., as it's super convenient. It does just fine.

As far as "weak and fragile" goes... I don't know what you are talking about (but I don't own this particular model). Also, how much torque do you need on a PC build?

It's even nice and convenient when using in combination with another screwdriver. Use the screwdriver for the first loosen or the last tighten if needed on items that need excessive torque.

Ultimately, it's a tool of convenience. Something many of us are happy to pay for, and consider it a deal at this price.
Last edited by JamaalJohnson April 25, 2025 at 12:06 PM.
1
2d ago
33 Posts
Joined Nov 2010
2d ago
contraba55
2d ago
33 Posts
I got one with this same torque rating but more bits. It's a great little tool, but if I were buying it again, I'd get one with more torque.

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