andrew lyner | 03/02/2019 16:19:47 |
274 forum posts 5 photos | I realise this a 'how long is a piece of spring' question but I have a number of elderly screwdrivers and reviving pozidrive drivers is not easy (I expect). So should I consider cracking off the handles and make them into punches and other tools? I guess they would need to be hardened and tempered when I have finished messing with them. |
John Haine | 03/02/2019 16:37:01 |
5563 forum posts 322 photos | I've some worn Pozidrive screwdrivers - the shanks seem to be made of nice material, I'm hoping one day to get round to re-grinding as flat-ended conventional drivers. |
Tim Stevens | 03/02/2019 16:39:01 |
![]() 1779 forum posts 1 photos | They make very good tent pegs Tim |
Mike Poole | 03/02/2019 16:54:06 |
![]() 3676 forum posts 82 photos | If they are a simple high carbon steel then repurposing them should be straight forward. If they are chrome vanadium then I think heat treatment may be a bit more complex. Mike |
John Paton 1 | 03/02/2019 18:05:29 |
![]() 327 forum posts 20 photos | Depends upon the screwdriver but if you heat the shaft and it melts the handle, pull it out and you have a good file handle for free. The rest can be machined in the lathe to make wire wool. (i.e I have never found a real use for scrap screwdriver shanks). I have bent the tip of the odd screwdriver by 90 degrees to use on awkwardly sited screws but that is about it. It always seems odd that we cannot put old tools or saucepans for that matter in the recycling bin.They must have much greater recycling value than old beans cans, especially aluminium frying pans. |
Michael Gilligan | 03/02/2019 19:04:21 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | The best repurposing of a screwdriver that I have seen was of a new one. When I worked in the Environmental Test Lab, we bought a shock-test machine: ... an early version of this one, if I recall correctly: **LINK** http://www.lansmont.com/products/shock/standard-shock-test-systems/lansmont-65-81/ For obvious reasons, the machine was supplied with a positive mechanical safety lock ... comprising a steel pin pushed through a hole in the guide bar. To our astonishment [having paid a significant price for the machine], aforesaid pin was a Stanley screwdriver with its Phillips tip neatly ground-off ... the bright red plastic handle was a dead give-away. Upon reflection, we did agree that this was a fine piece of 'value engineering'. MichaelG. . Edit: the holes in Lansmont's guide bars are clearly visible in the video featured on that page.
Edited By Michael Gilligan on 03/02/2019 19:17:16 |
Nick Wheeler | 03/02/2019 19:14:59 |
1227 forum posts 101 photos | Don't all flat screwdrivers get turned into a universal pokey/prying/stirring tool? I don't think I've ever seen a workspace or tool box that doesn't have at least one. |
Bazyle | 03/02/2019 20:13:35 |
![]() 6956 forum posts 229 photos | Assuming you are talking about modern round plastic handled things rather than nice old flat wooden handles. Apart from grinding down to bradawl, scriber, punch you can add bits for hex key, nut runner etc. The brake handle on my driving trolley is ex screwdriver as is the hand pump handle and the blowdown spanner would have been if I hadn't had a nut runner that size. If you are making any specialist pin spanners often made out of a bit of flat sheet you can weld the functional bit onto a screwdriver to give it a better handle and save a bit of sheet. |
Ian Welford | 03/02/2019 22:19:10 |
300 forum posts |
grind three facets onto the end and they make excellent awls for marking wood and starting off wood screws, ie making a hole into which the wood screw can be started. They also make good levers for the up and over garage door springs when you need to tension them up, muc( better than the metal pins they send with them do the purpose.
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Danny M2Z | 04/02/2019 08:15:52 |
![]() 963 forum posts 2 photos | Screwdriver handles are useful to re-purpose as fuel tanks for ancient model diesel engines (useless for glow fuel though - they melt) Here is what I made for a '50's ED Baby, Ok, wrong shape (not worth a form tool) but right colour, Works well though. * Danny M * |
John McNamara | 04/02/2019 08:17:02 |
![]() 1377 forum posts 133 photos | All my good quality old screwdrivers are intact. The ones that twist up like #8 fencing wire "Asianeasium" (my word) can go to the scrappy. Together with the fasteners with their smeared heads and other plasticine hardened steel gismos that infest society. BTW I am enjoying the grumpy stage of life!
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Neil Wyatt | 04/02/2019 09:26:48 |
![]() 19226 forum posts 749 photos 86 articles | Put a hex on the end, you won't regret it. |
Michael Gilligan | 04/02/2019 09:29:00 |
![]() 23121 forum posts 1360 photos | Posted by Neil Wyatt on 04/02/2019 09:26:48:
Put a hex on the end, you won't regret it. . Witchcraft ? |
not done it yet | 04/02/2019 10:17:51 |
7517 forum posts 20 photos | Posted by Neil Wyatt on 04/02/2019 09:26:48:
Put a hex on the end, you won't regret it. Canadians will be putting a Robertson on theirs!? |
Ady1 | 04/02/2019 10:34:28 |
![]() 6137 forum posts 893 photos | A knackered screwdriver is a future useful tool As mentioned, put a hex on it or a nice rounded end for pushing cloth through tight holes to clean them out properly
Its just a matter of time before you find a use |
Ian S C | 04/02/2019 10:52:35 |
![]() 7468 forum posts 230 photos | I'v made one into a Robertson driver, too hard to file, ground it up with the Dremel, it was a Philips so the original tip was a good guide for forming the square free hand. Another was made into a 3 flute driver for a special screw. A couple more have points on them, the first one was for aligning rivet holes in aircraft skins. I have thought of using a redundant screw drive for a crankshaft for a hot air motor, but I'v never got round to it. Ian S C |
Bazyle | 04/02/2019 13:40:03 |
![]() 6956 forum posts 229 photos | Given that 90% of screws are nowadays driven in with a small replaceable bit in an electric drill one option is just a hex socket so these bits can be used by hand. Of course probably we all have magnetic socketed hand ratchet screwdrivers for this anyway. |
Rod Renshaw | 04/02/2019 16:14:23 |
438 forum posts 2 photos | Hi Grind a four faceted acute point on the end of the shaft to make what an old school woodworker would call a "Bird-Cage Makers Awl" - used originally for making small holes in thin wood without splitting it in the days when the whole cage was made of wood. Lots of twist and not too much push!. I think Marples made these awls until the eighties. Useful now for making pilot holes for woodscrews. Works better than a bradawl in my opinion. Rod |
mark costello 1 | 04/02/2019 19:44:25 |
![]() 800 forum posts 16 photos | If You need a tommy bar one with a nice handle works well. |
Grotto | 04/02/2019 23:16:17 |
151 forum posts 93 photos | I've used old screwdrivers as handles for welding hammers (for chipping slag off weld when arc welding). Head is just a bit of mild steel (or whatever is sitting around) welded to the end of the old screwdriver. |
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