#2 jis phillips screwdriver bits

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Vessel Japanese Industrial Standard ( JIS) Screwdrivers! WE NOW HAVE STOCK on Larger Handles!  New Vessel DIN 5260 ( JIS- Type) 1/4 Bits are IN!  Ready to Ship! We've been asked many times for the JIS Standard screwdriver with bigger, 'grippier' handles.  We've also been asked for 1/4 Drive JIS Phillips Bits!  These tools are the answer.  With a larger handle, you no longer have to be an individual with the grip of a windsurfer to drive JIS Screws properly.  Vessel has a lifetime warranty through RJRCool Tools.com, and the tools are made in Japan, where the JIS standard was created.  Important:  Vessel is making the 1/4 drive bits we carry to DIN Standard 5260.  They are NOT true JIS per se.  However, we have tested them extensively here and have determined that due to the tight corner radius on these bits (a key ingredient differentiating JIS from Phillips standards they fit JIS fasteners that you will encounter perfectly.  Vessel as a company has a large variety of tools for the electronics industry - but these rubber handles were deemed best for the R/ C Industry.  Try them with glow fuel on your hands!  We've used them here for quite some time, and they are outstanding.  In addition to the high quality rubber handle, there are a great variety of lengths as well - much, much longer than we have elsewhere!  Available in 1, 0 and 00 JIS sizes only.  For the smaller sizes ( 000) and smaller spaces in which to fit, go to Moody Tools ( See Left).  The bits are of an excellent tool steel, commercial grade construction and will hold up for years! Vessel JIS Drivers – There are multitudes of the 600 series JIS Standard rubber handled drivers now in stock from Vessel. We have put them all into an economical all-in-one set to suit! After much public comment, our search for a unique, strong and grippy handle has come to pass. We even carry 2.
A screw drive is the system used to turn a screw.[1][2] At a minimum, it is a feature on the screw that allows torque to be applied to it. Usually it also involves a mating tool, such as a screwdriver, that is used to turn it. The following heads are categorized based on commonality, with the less common drives being classified as tamper-resistant. Most heads come in a range of sizes, typically distinguished by a number, such as Phillips 00 or Torx T5. These sizes do not describe a particular dimension of the drive shape, but are arbitrary designations in the same sense as a Size 8 shoe or dress. Contents 1 Common types 1.1 External types Square Hex Pentagon Thumbscrew 1.2 Slotted types Slot Cross 1.3 Cruciform types Phillips Frearson French recess JIS B 1012 Mortorq Pozidriv Supadriv 1.4 Robertson 1.5 Hex socket 1.6 Hexalobular socket TTAP 1.7 Double-square 1.8 Combination drives Phillips/square Slotted/ Torx 2 Tamper-resistant types 2.1 Breakaway head 2.2 Bristol 2.3 Clutch 2.4 Claw 2.5 Double hex 2.6 Line 2.7 One-way 2.8 Pentalobe 2.9 Polydrive 2.10 Proprietary head 2.11 Protruding obstacle or pin type 2.12 Spanner 2.13 Spline 2.14 Torq-set 2.15 TA 2.16 TP3 2.17 Tri-point 2.18 Tri-wing 2.19 Triple square 3 Alternative categorizations 4 Notes 5 References 5.1 Bibliography 6 External links Common types[edit] External types[edit] External drives are characterized by a female tool and a male fastener. Square[edit] Square This screw drive uses square fastener heads. They can be turned with an adjustable wrench, open-end wrench, or 8- or 12-point[3] sockets. Common in the 19th and early 20th centuries, when it was easier and thriftier to manufacture than most other drives, it is less common today (although still easy to find) because the external hex is now cost-competitive.
JIS Screwdrivers w BW Quick Look by Brandon Jackson and Johnny Jarvis for web Bike World.com More: ▪  w BW Reviews Home ▪  Owner Comments ( Below) ▪  w BW Motorcycle Tool Reviews Also: Vessel Motorcycle Repair and Restoration JIS Screwdriver Kit Review Myth or Miracle? That is often the question when it comes to discussing JIS or Japanese Industrial Standard screwdrivers. I've been told there is no difference between a standard Phillips (or cross-head ) screwdriver and a JIS screwdriver as long as the sizes are equal. I wasn't so sure and my co-writer, Johnny, received strong push-back at a local motorcycle dealer for even suggesting such a screwdriver existed, but more on that in moment. I first found out about JIS screwdrivers through some internet site years ago but didn't think much about it until I went to change the coolant on my girlfriend's Honda NX250. The lock screw on the radiator cap is rather small and my standard screwdrivers were cutting it up like a fine French cheese. Johnny then came to the rescue with his wonder screwdriver.hmm - that sounds kind of odd. Anyway, even though the screwdriver itself looked about two sizes too large, it fit perfectly and cleanly bit into the screw even after I had tortured the poor fastener with my standard screwdrivers of various sizes. He was definitely on to something. Here he is to tell his story: JOHNNY: The parts guy at the motorcycle shop stared at me for an eternity before he finally blinked and said, ' There's no such thing.' Patiently I tried again to explain to him just exactly what I was looking for:  A Japanese-spec screwdriver that wouldn't strip out the screws on my old KZ 650. I suggested he ask the mechanics in the shop, figuring they would probably know where I could get one, but that didn't work out either. He returned a few minutes later, only to tell me that the mechanic said I was using the wrong size.
It was 1967 and I was working in a Honda shop assembling new Honda motorcycles out of their shipping crates. On the side of one of the crates it said new JIS screw. OK, JIS screw? What the heck is a JIS screw? I asked and was told to stop asking stupid questions and get back to work. Which was shopease for We don't know but we don't want to admit it. So I went back to my wrenches and forgot about it. It was a long time before I figured out what JIS meant. There just was no information that was readily available in those days. Fortunately you have the Internet so we can do a bit better now. If you look at a lot of Phillips head screws on the crankcases of just about all motorcycles you will find a goodly number are damaged. This is because all Phillips head screws are not created equal. Now Henry F. Phillips was a businessman from Oregon who produced a good screw head to be used by automated production lines that use powered screwdrivers. It seems he, Phillips, bought the rights to this design from a guy named Thompson who invented it in 1935. Today we have a large number of Phillips screw types running around but generally only one type is used on motorcycles, the JIS type. Do an internet search and you will find a lot of different types of Phillips head screws out there. That is the problem. There are different types of Phillips head screwdrivers around but only one type fits JIS screws. Look at the examples below. Good Fit Bad Fit Phillips screwdriver that fits good. Good bit, Bad bit. Phillips screwdriver that fits not so good. The problem is that while both of these Phillips screwdriver bits fit a JIS screw head, one of them is a bad fit. Now if you take a good impact driver with a bad fitting bit and whack that puppy good and hard with a big hammer most times the screw will come out. Trouble is when the screw is in extra tight and the bit does not fit good the.