frontpageeverlast556 posted Yesterday 02:27 AM
Item 1 of 3
Item 1 of 3
frontpageeverlast556 posted Yesterday 02:27 AM
Select Home Depot Stores: 4-Piece Ontel Speed Out Titanium Screw Extractor
(In-Store Purchase Only)$4.00
$16
75% offHome Depot
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Usually the reason screws are stripped in the first place is because they're hopelessly seized, and an extractor isn't usually going to save the day in that case.
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Usually the reason screws are stripped in the first place is because they're hopelessly seized, and an extractor isn't usually going to save the day in that case.
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Titanium is strong compared to its weight, it is not strong compared to an equal amount of steel. These are also not titanium anyhow, they are plated.
These are the cheapest of the cheap.
I think that having four little drill bits in a shape that leaves four holes to grab into, and then puts four pins into the holes would give you enough to turn it.
A Modern "Star" Alternative
If you want to cut a "new star shape" as mentioned, the mechanical industry often uses Torx (6-lobe) bits for this. If a screw is stripped, a common "mechanic's trick" is to drill a pilot hole and then hammer a slightly oversized Torx bit into the hole. The hardened lobes of the Torx bit "bite" into the soft screw metal, creating six points of contact that are much harder to strip than a four-pin system.
I think that having four little drill bits in a shape that leaves four holes to grab into, and then puts four pins into the holes would give you enough to turn it.
A Modern "Star" Alternative
If you want to cut a "new star shape" as mentioned, the mechanical industry often uses Torx (6-lobe) bits for this. If a screw is stripped, a common "mechanic's trick" is to drill a pilot hole and then hammer a slightly oversized Torx bit into the hole. The hardened lobes of the Torx bit "bite" into the soft screw metal, creating six points of contact that are much harder to strip than a four-pin system.
I think that having four little drill bits in a shape that leaves four holes to grab into, and then puts four pins into the holes would give you enough to turn it.
A Modern "Star" Alternative
If you want to cut a "new star shape" as mentioned, the mechanical industry often uses Torx (6-lobe) bits for this. If a screw is stripped, a common "mechanic's trick" is to drill a pilot hole and then hammer a slightly oversized Torx bit into the hole. The hardened lobes of the Torx bit "bite" into the soft screw metal, creating six points of contact that are much harder to strip than a four-pin system.
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