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thunder October 31st 05 05:53 AM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
On Mon, 31 Oct 2005 00:33:32 +0000, Shortwave Sportfishing wrote:


I believe, and I am more than willing to be corrected, that Craftsman
power hand tools were built by Stanley which is defacto DeWalt.

I think I read that In Business Week a while back.


I'm not sure about that, but DeWalt is owned by Black & Decker.

http://www.fortune.com/fortune/print...119285,00.html

John H. November 6th 05 03:47 AM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 GMT, Gene Kearns
wrote:

On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.


Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....


Are you predrilling your holes? I never put a stainless (or any other) screw
into anything but soft pine without predrilling. Saves a lot of stripped screws
and aggravation.
--
John H

"It's *not* a baby kicking, bride of mine, it's just a fetus!"

Hypocrital Liberal

Don White November 6th 05 04:19 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
John H. wrote:
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 GMT, Gene Kearns
wrote:


On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:

A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.

Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....



Are you predrilling your holes? I never put a stainless (or any other) screw
into anything but soft pine without predrilling. Saves a lot of stripped screws
and aggravation.


Those green, big coarse threaded 'deck screws' don't usually need a
pilot hole drilled. (in spruce)

John H. November 6th 05 05:33 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 16:19:00 GMT, Don White wrote:

John H. wrote:
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 GMT, Gene Kearns
wrote:


On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:

A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.

Horse feathers.


AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....



Are you predrilling your holes? I never put a stainless (or any other) screw
into anything but soft pine without predrilling. Saves a lot of stripped screws
and aggravation.


Those green, big coarse threaded 'deck screws' don't usually need a
pilot hole drilled. (in spruce)


Well, he's stripping something. Not sure what it is. Pre-drilling has always
solved my screw stripping problems - in anything.
--
John H

"It's *not* a baby kicking, bride of mine, it's just a fetus!"

Hypocrital Liberal

Bert Robbins November 6th 05 11:04 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 

"Gene Kearns" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.


Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....


Real nuts and bolts have six sides.

Real socket wrenches only have six internal sides.




Don White November 6th 05 11:38 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
Bert Robbins wrote:



Real nuts and bolts have six sides.

Real socket wrenches only have six internal sides.


What?.. better sets come with sockets in both 6 and 12 point
configuration. I believe there's also an 8 point socket for square
nuts. I know this...I've been looking at Snap-On Tools (too expensive),
Craftsman from Sears, and Mastercraft sets from Canadian Tire.
Yesterday, the wife bought me a nice Craftsman set on a half price sale
but I have to wait until Christmas.

Terry Spragg November 7th 05 03:50 AM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
Don White wrote:

John H. wrote:

On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 GMT, Gene Kearns
wrote:


On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:

A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.


Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....


you have obviously damaged your screwdriver bit.
Robertson is "THE BEST", so long as they are genuine, not cheap
knock offs. Robertsons are patented for a reason.

Terry K

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....




Are you predrilling your holes? I never put a stainless (or any other)
screw
into anything but soft pine without predrilling. Saves a lot of
stripped screws
and aggravation.



Those green, big coarse threaded 'deck screws' don't usually need a
pilot hole drilled. (in spruce)



Lloyd November 8th 05 07:54 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 +0000, Gene Kearns wrote:

On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.


Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....


You know, I can't remember EVER stripping a Robertson screw. Maybe you
should have spent the $14 on a decent screwdriver?

Lloyd



Bill McKee November 8th 05 09:14 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 

"Lloyd" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 +0000, Gene Kearns wrote:

On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.

Horse feathers.



AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....


You know, I can't remember EVER stripping a Robertson screw. Maybe you
should have spent the $14 on a decent screwdriver?

Lloyd



The Robertson deck screws come with a driver bit.



P Fritz November 8th 05 09:29 PM

To My Canadian Friends...
 

"Bill McKee" wrote in message
ink.net...

"Lloyd" wrote in message
...
On Sun, 06 Nov 2005 00:52:16 +0000, Gene Kearns wrote:

On Sun, 30 Oct 2005 23:33:27 GMT, Shortwave Sportfishing
wrote:
A proper Robertson has a tapered bit to fit the screw tightly.

Horse feathers.


AHHHHHHHHHHHGHHGHGHGHGHHHHHH...... (primal scream)....

OK, so I'm fixing the deck today and I got a box of these GD SS
screws. $14/lb..... and I must have stripped out the heads of 6-7
already....

POS..... gimme Torx or SOMETHING.....


You know, I can't remember EVER stripping a Robertson screw. Maybe you
should have spent the $14 on a decent screwdriver?

Lloyd



The Robertson deck screws come with a driver bit.


I found that the square 'slot' in SS decks stripped out much easier than a
philips head.








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