Fanttik Innovation Direct via Amazon has Fanttik E1 Max 3.7V Mini Electric Screwdriver Set w/ 50 Magnetic Bits (Grey, White or Silver) on sale for $48.97 - $14.69 (apply promo code C3SLKDMAX at checkout) = $34.28. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Staff Member Skillful_Pickle for finding this deal
Features:
Magnetic case that keeps the electric screwdriver and 50 metal bits orderly in a place
Ideal for tablet computers, mobile phones, watches, electronic bracelets, cameras, precision instruments, etc.
Chargeable long-lasting battery, certified to operate 450 screws for a full charge
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Fanttik Innovation Direct via Amazon has Fanttik E1 Max 3.7V Mini Electric Screwdriver Set w/ 50 Magnetic Bits (Grey, White or Silver) on sale for $48.97 - $14.69 (apply promo code C3SLKDMAX at checkout) = $34.28. Shipping is free.
Thanks to Staff Member Skillful_Pickle for finding this deal
Features:
Magnetic case that keeps the electric screwdriver and 50 metal bits orderly in a place
Ideal for tablet computers, mobile phones, watches, electronic bracelets, cameras, precision instruments, etc.
Chargeable long-lasting battery, certified to operate 450 screws for a full charge
Model: Fanttik E1 Max 3.7V Mini Electric Screwdriver, Precision Electric Screwdriver, 50-in-1 Magnetic Bits, Max 3 N.m, Magnetic Storage, 5/32''Hex, Repair Tool Set for Phone Camera Laptop Watch - Grey
Deal HistoryÂ
Deal History includes data from multiple reputable stores, such as Best Buy, Target, and Walmart. The lowest price among stores for a given day is selected as the "Sale Price".
Sale Price does not include sale prices at Amazon unless a deal was posted by a community member.
Low torque is a feature and the primary reason why you'd even consider buying something like this over something with more power. Tiny screws have tiny, easy-to-strip threads.
They work decently for stuff like PC builds or eyeglass repair, in other words, small stuff. Not sure what you expect out of a device the size of a Sharpie.
I picked up one of these a few months ago and absolutely love it for working on laptops. Zips out the screws quickly and runs them back in without overtorquing. Has all the bits I need and the tweezers and spudger tool are handy as well.
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3d ago
May 6, 2025 6:15 PM
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from JollySofa692
:
these things are absolute crap. zero torque, only good for things like removing a battery cover off a toy or something.
They work decently for stuff like PC builds or eyeglass repair, in other words, small stuff. Not sure what you expect out of a device the size of a Sharpie.
I picked up one of these a few months ago and absolutely love it for working on laptops. Zips out the screws quickly and runs them back in without overtorquing. Has all the bits I need and the tweezers and spudger tool are handy as well.
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Quote
from JollySofa692
:
these things are absolute crap. zero torque, only good for things like removing a battery cover off a toy or something.
Low torque is a feature and the primary reason why you'd even consider buying something like this over something with more power. Tiny screws have tiny, easy-to-strip threads.
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Low torque is a feature and the primary reason why you'd even consider buying something like this over something with more power. Tiny screws have tiny, easy-to-strip threads.
Some are like this. I'd even say most at like this. But the majority of the ones I deal with aren't like this. Battery covers aren't important. I'm building and modding printers, Ikea furniture and stuff. Dealing with nearly 1000 tiny screws a week. The one I've stripped was because my power was lacking to push the driver through the plastic or wood if they are self driving.
Of course these aren't the world's best screws I'm working with but they are what's included. Doing it all with manual driver is exhausting.
I have a ryboi and a different brand of electric drivers. Both lack the necessary power and the batteries often die so I have had use both. My larger impacts are just too large to work with. The m12 driver helps when it fits but it often doesn't.
Would love this form factor with an impact driver that could do 500+ screws in a day.
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Quote
from JollySofa692
:
these things are absolute crap. zero torque, only good for things like removing a battery cover off a toy or something.
If you're using these for something other than machine screws or small component assembly/disassembly, you're asking a tool to do something it's not made to handle, and the problem is you. These aren't for assembling IKEA furniture/etc, you'd want something like the HOTO and similar "small"/"pocket" (but not mini/micro) drivers for that. And even for things like disassembly, sometimes you have to manually start the screw before switching to powered, and that's actually a good thing.
If this one specifically has some sort of torque issue you've encountered, maybe give some context of what, to you, "zero torque" means? But if you're complaining about the class of precision micro drivers in general: you're wrong, and you're either using them wrong or you got a bad one.
Personally, sometimes these precision micro-drivers run faster than I'd like for certain applications, and I wish the gearing was different or they had variable speed. The form factor when they make them just round tubes isn't the greatest. And I prefer a standard drill's torque clutch (aka the ring with numbers apparently nearly no one knows how to use properly) to how these handle torque settings. But they're incredibly useful if you do any amount of work that involves more than just one or two machine screws.
What I mostly use is a 3 year old Arrowmax SES mini, and I've bought extra mini drivers when on sale just for whenever I inevitably burn out the motor or the battery finally gives out. The idea of doing without it is beyond painful for electronics work and 3d printer repair/rebuilds. But fanttiks are usually well reviewed on average (all of these drivers end up with cases of lemons/etc). It's not meant to replace my Bosch 12v, much less my 18v impact driver, but equally I'd never use those for the type of work I use it on (the 12v would be fine for most 3d printer work at least with the clutch set right, but annoying in tight spaces).
Some are like this. I'd even say most at like this. But the majority of the ones I deal with aren't like this. Battery covers aren't important. I'm building and modding printers, Ikea furniture and stuff. Dealing with nearly 1000 tiny screws a week. The one I've stripped was because my power was lacking to push the driver through the plastic or wood if they are self driving.
Of course these aren't the world's best screws I'm working with but they are what's included. Doing it all with manual driver is exhausting.
I have a ryboi and a different brand of electric drivers. Both lack the necessary power and the batteries often die so I have had use both. My larger impacts are just too large to work with. The m12 driver helps when it fits but it often doesn't.
Would love this form factor with an impact driver that could do 500+ screws in a day.
You could buy a few of these and they will combine to do any amount of screws that you needed.
I have those rechargeable lights that are one of the deals on here and they have magnets on the back that you screw on to the drywall and the lights stick on and they use these tiny screws and I was lazy and didn't want to do it right so I grabbed this screwdriver last night and it did it. Used every ounce of torque to do it but it did it. This screwdriver is for precision stuff and they don't pretend it is for anything else, if you are looking for a real screwdriver, get the S1 Pro. I have both and they both have their uses. The S1 Pro also won't replace the impact or a drill for jobs that require those also.
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May 8, 2025 7:41 AM
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Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank ChaosMachine
Not every thing needs an impact.
Almost like that's what it's for.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank glazedfaith
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Of course these aren't the world's best screws I'm working with but they are what's included. Doing it all with manual driver is exhausting.
I have a ryboi and a different brand of electric drivers. Both lack the necessary power and the batteries often die so I have had use both. My larger impacts are just too large to work with. The m12 driver helps when it fits but it often doesn't.
Would love this form factor with an impact driver that could do 500+ screws in a day.
Our community has rated this post as helpful. If you agree, why not thank taswyn
If this one specifically has some sort of torque issue you've encountered, maybe give some context of what, to you, "zero torque" means? But if you're complaining about the class of precision micro drivers in general: you're wrong, and you're either using them wrong or you got a bad one.
Personally, sometimes these precision micro-drivers run faster than I'd like for certain applications, and I wish the gearing was different or they had variable speed. The form factor when they make them just round tubes isn't the greatest. And I prefer a standard drill's torque clutch (aka the ring with numbers apparently nearly no one knows how to use properly) to how these handle torque settings. But they're incredibly useful if you do any amount of work that involves more than just one or two machine screws.
What I mostly use is a 3 year old Arrowmax SES mini, and I've bought extra mini drivers when on sale just for whenever I inevitably burn out the motor or the battery finally gives out. The idea of doing without it is beyond painful for electronics work and 3d printer repair/rebuilds. But fanttiks are usually well reviewed on average (all of these drivers end up with cases of lemons/etc). It's not meant to replace my Bosch 12v, much less my 18v impact driver, but equally I'd never use those for the type of work I use it on (the 12v would be fine for most 3d printer work at least with the clutch set right, but annoying in tight spaces).
Of course these aren't the world's best screws I'm working with but they are what's included. Doing it all with manual driver is exhausting.
I have a ryboi and a different brand of electric drivers. Both lack the necessary power and the batteries often die so I have had use both. My larger impacts are just too large to work with. The m12 driver helps when it fits but it often doesn't.
Would love this form factor with an impact driver that could do 500+ screws in a day.
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Paid $56 almost 2 years ago. Grandson loves it for what it was intended to be used. Made me a Fantik fan