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DPG

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Morning all.

Someone on here was talking about Yankee screwdrivers a few days ago. I still use one of them occasionally at home - it was my late father's and is roughly 45 years old I think. And still works perfectly, and the original bits are still fine, which goes to show how well they made this stuff.

Anyway, have a look at the photo - who knows what the 9 extra items are to the left of the main bits? Anybody else got a set of them?

[ElectriciansForums.net] Guess the item (old screwdrivers)
 
I could paint it. Mind you like the original purple to be fair.
Hello DPG.
The 8 small bits to the left are from a blue-handled Stanley Pushdrill, 1970/80s vintage. It works exactly like a miniature Yankee screwdriver, but makes pilot holes in timber rather than turning a screw. The Pushdrill and Yankee bits don't interchange; both are useful tools.
Regards, Colin.
 
Hello DPG.
The 8 small bits to the left are from a blue-handled Stanley Pushdrill, 1970/80s vintage. It works exactly like a miniature Yankee screwdriver, but makes pilot holes in timber rather than turning a screw. The Pushdrill and Yankee bits don't interchange; both are useful tools.
Regards, Colin.

Almost 100% correct. But the pushdrills do interchange with the big Yankee - that's what the metal adaptor is for (above the set of drills).
 
If my memory serves me well the yankee screwdriver was made by stanley, my old mentor had one.

He was very fast with it on the P clips and pyro
Yes, for some jobs they made driving in screws so easy & fast. Also RS (and others) used to do ratchet screwdrivers for similar reasons.

These days it is simply a squeeze on the power driver and...oops! Oh well, you never wanted to unscrew that anyway, did you?
 
Sorry to disagree, Tel...good, modern screws don't need a pilot (in the right circumstances, obviously)
Good quality, old-fashioned "proper" screws do though.
 
Sorry to disagree, Tel...good, modern screws don't need a pilot (in the right circumstances, obviously)
Good quality, old-fashioned "proper" screws do though.
and pirates don't need a slipknot in the noose, but one makes them hang easier. ???
 
should always drill pilot holes to prevent wood splitting (unless you are a builder or kitchen fitter).
The cabinet maker I knew always said blunt the nails before driving them in that way the fibres of the timber are cut and not separated, it's separating them that splits the timber.
 
The cabinet maker I knew always said blunt the nails before driving them in that way the fibres of the timber are cut and not separated, it's separating them that splits the timber.
my dad used to do the same.
 

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