ff

"foggytown"

03/03/2005 12:33 PM

Un-necessary conmplication?

Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.

FoggyTown


This topic has 67 replies

DD

David

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 1:22 PM

I think we are in agreement. :)

Dave

Teamcasa wrote:

> The Posi-drive screw was originally designed for automated use at GM
> assembly plants. It is far better than Phillips.
>
> Dave
>
> "David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>I beg to differ. I'll take a Posi over a Phillips any day of the week.
>>
>>Dave
>>
>>foggytown wrote:
>>
>>
>>>Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
>>>Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
>>>and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
>>>annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
>>>to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>>>
>>>FoggyTown
>>>
>
>
>
>
> Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> ** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY **
> ----------------------------------------------------------
> http://www.usenet.com

Gg

"G.E.R.R.Y."

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 4:55 PM

In article <[email protected]>, Dave Hinz
<[email protected]> wrote:

> What's that guy...Neville something, big honking mole on his
> face, and the vocal equivalent of "Kenny G"?

Aaron Neville, one of the old Neville Brothers.

Gerry

Gg

"G.E.R.R.Y."

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 12:10 AM

In article <[email protected]>, Buck Frobisher
<[email protected]> wrote:

> Frank Johansen
> Aurora, Ontario

Frank, I am also in Aurora. Are you the Frank with the antiques
refinishing place on Vata Court?

Gerry

Gg

"G.E.R.R.Y."

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 12:20 AM

In article <[email protected]>, Swingman
<[email protected]> wrote:

> Ever try to get a modern, small hand tool out of one of those molded, 10 ga
> plastic, armored "packages" that someone, somewhere, thinks is necessary ...
> and without another sharp, previously purchased hand tool?

The worst for me by far is the same packaging for an SD card for a
digital camera. The SD card is literally the size of a postage stamp
and is enclosed in one of those packages about 12in. by 6in. whose
partially ripped edges can turn into a scary sharp weapon which can
draw blood. I've never seen anything so stupidly packaged. DAMHIKT

Gerry

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 10:59 AM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when Robatoy <[email protected]>
wrote:

>There are more cockroaches than people on this planet.
>Superior numbers do not denote a higher life-form.

<aol> Me too ! </aol>

Fj

"FriscoSoxFan"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 12:43 PM

Because for some unbeknownst reason, not everyone has abandoned philips
for square drive yet?

RN

"Ray"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 12:59 PM

I'll second that! Mac is far better than Windows.

SD

San Diego Joe

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 1:39 PM

"Dave Hinz" wrote:

> On 3 Mar 2005 12:33:28 -0800, foggytown <[email protected]> wrote:
>> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
>> Phillips to begin with?
>
> Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.
>
>> It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
>> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
>> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
>> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> Well, Betamax was superior to VHS in image quality, just as Posi is
> better than Phillips for actually turning a screw. Popularity and
> quality have a relationship that is coincidental at best.
>
> Dave Hinz
>

Hence the popularity of microsoft windows.
--
San Diego Joe

R

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 9:46 AM

Dave Hinz wrote:
> On 3 Mar 2005 12:33:28 -0800, foggytown <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> > Phillips to begin with?

"Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips."

One man's "bad" is another's "good". The popularity of the phillips
head screw is their use in drywall. Try shooting those screws that
don't cam out into some rock and see what happens to your efficiency.

ray

BF

"Buck Frobisher"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 5:06 PM

"Silvan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> It's kinda funny, actually. I haven't used any of those Roberson screws,
> so
> maybe, just maybe, they're actually different. I hate Phillips and Allen
> screws because they strip out too easily, and you have to turn them into
> slotted screws to get them out. Torx screws are a little better, but
> still, sometimes you have to turn them into slotted screws to get them
> out.
> Personally, therefore, I prefer slotted screws for many applications.
> Like
> any application where I might have to remove the screw some day. Or lag
> screws, even better, if I can use them.

here's a very short history of the Robertson screw:

http://www.mysteriesofcanada.com/Ontario/robertson_screws.htm

and here's the company's website: http://www.robertsonscrew.com/

They even thought to colour-code the screwdrivers to make the hole sizes
easier to remember. "Hey, throw me a red Robertson, willya?"

You can blame Henry Ford's greed and P. L. Robertson's stubbornness if you
regret the non-availability in the U.S. even today.

--
"Stay calm. Be brave. Wait for the signs."

regards,

Frank Johansen
Aurora, Ontario

bR

[email protected] (Robert Bonomi)

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 1:06 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 00:17:02 GMT, Dorothy and Richard Shelson
><[email protected]> wrote:
>> Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
>> screw"?
>
>Looks enough like a Phillips to confuse the unwary, but doesn't fit
>a Phillips bit very well at all. Works excellent with the right
>bits, though.
>
>> We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
>> exist in the US.
>
>We call that "square drive screws" here, the only people I've ever
>seen call it the Robertson are Canadians (he was Canadian, I'd guess).

Robertson _invented_ em. Robertson is a *brand* name. Robertson gets
_really_ upset if somebody refers to "Robertson Screws" that are not
*manufactured* by Robertson. Robertson _is_ a Canadian Company.

Hence 'similar' screws by other manufacturers are called "something else".


You can get genuine Robertsons in the U.S., if you look in the right
places, but they are significantly more expensive than "something else". :)

BF

"Buck Frobisher"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 12:22 AM

"Dave Hinz" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 17:06:33 -0500, Buck Frobisher <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>>
>> You can blame Henry Ford's greed and P. L. Robertson's stubbornness if
>> you
>> regret the non-availability in the U.S. even today.
>
> Of Ford's greed, there's little doubt, but I've been buying Robertson
> hardware for more than a decade in normal retail hardware outlets. The
> non-availability of which you speak doesn't exist.

If you mean to say that Robertson screws and drivers became available 10
years ago, then mazel tov! I didn't know that had happened. I suppose that
70 years is enough time for it to catch on.

But, judging by what I have heard in the past, and some of the comments here
regarding "Canadian screws" (remember the crowbar story earlier in this
thread?) I would say that, in general, Robertson is almost completely
unknown in the US.

Am I wrong, folks?

--
"Stay calm. Be brave. Wait for the signs."

regards,

Frank Johansen
Aurora, Ontario

bR

[email protected] (Robert Bonomi)

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 6:56 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
Silvan <[email protected]> wrote:
>Swingman wrote:
>
>> Or be doomed to an eternity of peeling off those ^$%# INDIVIDUAL stickers
>> that now come on every tomato, bell pepper and anything that looks like a
>> vegetable in the supermarket.
>
>You're supposed to peel those off?

According to the State of California, those _labels_ contain ingredients
that are known to cause cancer. Yet, Calif. =REQUIRES= them on edible
products. *sigh*

bR

[email protected] (Robert Bonomi)

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 2:25 AM

In article <[email protected]>,
Swingman <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>"Silvan" wrote in message
>> Swingman wrote:
>>
>> >> > vegetable in the supermarket.
>> >>
>> >> You're supposed to peel those off?
>> >
>> > Well, you can leave them on, but they're real tough to floss off your
>> > shiny brites. (not a bad idea, though ... just make them edible and
>> > fortified with vitamins).
>> >
>> > Besides, like many other "unnecessary complications" in a modern life
>> > dictated by corporate whims, they are there for the convenience of the
>> > corporation, not the customer.
>>
>> Well, you can argue both sides of this one. For the convenience of the
>> corporation, yes, by allowing computerized scanning and whatnot. For the
>> convenience of the customer too, though, so your cashier doesn't have to
>> remember 700 PLU numbers, or sit there flipping through a stack of cards
>> every time you bring some wierd Chinese vegetable to the register.
>
>OK, by gawd ... let's argue. :)
>
>Cashiers worthy of the name were once required to know/memorize produce
>prices.

*sigh* At the grocery I grew up shopping at, most of the cashiers had pricing
for the _entire_ inventory memorized. This was, admittedly, a somewhat
'strange' operation -- they didn't advertise (TV, radio, _or_ newspaper); they
rarely had 'sales' (except when they got a 'deal' on special-purchase produce
dairy, or meats), etc. And they carried *lots* of brands -- if they had only
4 brands of some item, that was a 'limited' selection. (I was *really* shocked
when I moved to the 'big city', and found the "big local operations" typically
carried the 'house brand' and *one* other) And this was a local operation,
not a national/regional chain. They hired good people, and paid them well.
*Lots* of the 'line' help made a career of working in their stores. There
was a nearly _two_year_ *waiting* *list*, to get on as a 'bag boy' there.

They were a *long* time putting in computerized bar-code-scanning registers.
And a source of *great* frustration to the people selling same. Cuz when
the salesdroids came calling, they said "Sure, we'll buy your system, *as*
*long*as* it is at least as fast as our current cashiers." They even
let the salesdroid pick the store cashier for the "time trials". It _was_
a 'stacked deck', nonetheless. He got to pick from the prime-shift crew,
only. Who all had at least 10-15 years on the job. Who could run the
register entirely "by touch" with one hand, while shovelling the groceries
past with the other hand. Who _didn't_ need to look at a price-tag on
_anything_, cuz they knew prices on the =entire= inventory. Who *didn't*
even need to turn the item right-side up, or turn it around, to know
what the item was. *AND* who, while doing all this, would greet at least
80% of the customers _by_name_, knowing them well enough to be exchanging
news tidbits / gossip / etc. *while* running the register full-tilt.
It was not uncommon to have _two_ baggers *per*register*, so that bagging
didn't slow down the line. <grin>

"Insult to injury", when there was a price difference during the trials,
between the proposed computerized system and the 'old fashioned' cashier,
it was *usually* the computer that was wrong.

Lots of cash-register salesmen went away *very* frustrated.

I think it was around _1990_, that they *finally* converted. More because
the quality of help available had declined, than that the scanners had
improved.

Da

Dorothy and Richard Shelson

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 12:17 AM

Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
screw"? We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
exist in the US. I think it is far superior to the Phillips. Is that
what you are referring to?

Richard Shelson

foggytown wrote:
> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> FoggyTown
>

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 8:54 PM

On 3 Mar 2005 12:33:28 -0800, foggytown <[email protected]> wrote:
> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> Phillips to begin with?

Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.

> It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.

Well, Betamax was superior to VHS in image quality, just as Posi is
better than Phillips for actually turning a screw. Popularity and
quality have a relationship that is coincidental at best.

Dave Hinz

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 9:21 PM

On 3 Mar 2005 12:59:03 -0800, Ray <[email protected]> wrote:
> I'll second that! Mac is far better than Windows.

Yes, that's another good example. Windows is very popular, but then
again, many people get the common cold...

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 4:08 PM

On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 00:17:02 GMT, Dorothy and Richard Shelson <[email protected]> wrote:
> Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
> screw"?

Looks enough like a Phillips to confuse the unwary, but doesn't fit
a Phillips bit very well at all. Works excellent with the right
bits, though.

> We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
> exist in the US.

We call that "square drive screws" here, the only people I've ever
seen call it the Robertson are Canadians (he was Canadian, I'd guess).

> I think it is far superior to the Phillips. Is that
> what you are referring to?

Nope, it's an entirely different kind of screw, altogether.

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 4:09 PM

On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 00:38:37 +0000, Andy Dingley <[email protected]> wrote:
> It was somewhere outside Barstow when Dave Hinz <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>>Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.
>
> And Phillips was itself an improvement on Reed, which had skinny slots
> and screwdriver bits that broke.

Reed & Prince maybe?

Dave "Why on earth do I know this stuff?" Hinz

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 4:10 PM

On Thu, 03 Mar 2005 22:18:45 -0500, Robatoy <[email protected]> wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>,
> Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> Well, Betamax was superior to VHS in image quality, just as Posi is
>> better than Phillips for actually turning a screw. Popularity and
>> quality have a relationship that is coincidental at best.
>
> Macs and Window boxes.

Yup, although that one tends to be awfully emotionally charged, and people
with the inferior technology (Windows) usually don't know enough about
the better one (Macs) to know any better. With screws that are obviously
hard to use, vs. screws that don't suck at all, it's easier to be
objective.

Dave Hinz

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 5:05 PM

On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 11:23:59 -0500, Silvan <[email protected]> wrote:
> Unisaw A100 wrote:
>
>> Robatoy wrote:
>>>The guy who invented the slotted screw should be forced to listen to
>>>Celine Dion.
>>
>> And Gordon Lightfoot.
>>
>> And Anne Murray.
>>
>> In one continuous sitting.
>
> Cher.
>
>> Seriously though, the guy who invented the slotted screw
>> was a genius considering the alternative of the day. It's
>> the guys who continue to make them/force them on us,
>
> It's kinda funny, actually. I haven't used any of those Roberson screws, so
> maybe, just maybe, they're actually different.

They really are. I used them for my deck (stainless in - gasp - composite
deck boards), and the worked _very_ well.

> I hate Phillips and Allen
> screws because they strip out too easily, and you have to turn them into
> slotted screws to get them out. Torx screws are a little better, but
> still, sometimes you have to turn them into slotted screws to get them out.

Wow. If you're screwing up Torx screws, you might be using
one size too small of a bit. It'll fit, but it'll strip much
easier. I don't think you _can_ strip a Torx screw with the right
size bit.

>> they should be the ones forced to listen to Celine, Gordon,
>> Anne and (insert your fingers on a chalkboard celebrity
>> singer here).
>
> Cher, Cher, Cher.

What's that guy...Neville something, big honking mole on his
face, and the vocal equivalent of "Kenny G"?

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 6:36 PM

On 4 Mar 2005 09:46:50 -0800, [email protected] <[email protected]> wrote:
> Dave Hinz wrote:
>> On 3 Mar 2005 12:33:28 -0800, foggytown <[email protected]> wrote:
>> > Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
>> > Phillips to begin with?
>
> "Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips."
>
> One man's "bad" is another's "good". The popularity of the phillips
> head screw is their use in drywall. Try shooting those screws that
> don't cam out into some rock and see what happens to your efficiency.

My drywall gun doesn't rely on cam-out, it has a slip clutch. I'd
be surprised if that wasn't universal? Cam-out would leave a
(sharp!) bur in a drywall screw, which isn't what you're after. Makes
mudding more of a pain in the ass than it already is. DAMHIKT.

Dave "I'll never tape and mud drywall again. And this time I mean it." Hinz

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 10:06 PM

On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 16:55:08 -0500, G.E.R.R.Y. <[email protected]> wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>, Dave Hinz
><[email protected]> wrote:
>
>> What's that guy...Neville something, big honking mole on his
>> face, and the vocal equivalent of "Kenny G"?
>
> Aaron Neville, one of the old Neville Brothers.

There's more than one? That's not good.

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 11:00 PM

On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 17:06:33 -0500, Buck Frobisher <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> You can blame Henry Ford's greed and P. L. Robertson's stubbornness if you
> regret the non-availability in the U.S. even today.

Of Ford's greed, there's little doubt, but I've been buying Robertson
hardware for more than a decade in normal retail hardware outlets. The
non-availability of which you speak doesn't exist.

LB

Larry Blanchard

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 4:53 PM

In article <[email protected]>, [email protected]
says...
> Dave "I'll never tape and mud drywall again. And this time I mean it." Hinz
>
Another subject we agree on :-).

--
Homo sapiens is a goal, not a description

DH

Dave Hinz

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 3:59 AM

On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 16:53:57 -0800, Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
> In article <[email protected]>, [email protected]
> says...
>> Dave "I'll never tape and mud drywall again. And this time I mean it." Hinz
>>
> Another subject we agree on :-).

Dang. This is getting scary. But you know, when there are people good
at it, willing to work for...reasonable terms... (as in, I'll clean all
the viruses and spyware off your Windows box if you tape and mud this
room for me terms), it's just not gonna be me doing it. 'hate' is too
gentle of a word.

Dave

Td

"Teamcasa"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 1:13 PM

The Posi-drive screw was originally designed for automated use at GM
assembly plants. It is far better than Phillips.

Dave

"David" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>I beg to differ. I'll take a Posi over a Phillips any day of the week.
>
> Dave
>
> foggytown wrote:
>
>> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
>> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
>> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
>> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
>> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>>
>> FoggyTown
>>



Posted Via Usenet.com Premium Usenet Newsgroup Services
----------------------------------------------------------
** SPEED ** RETENTION ** COMPLETION ** ANONYMITY **
----------------------------------------------------------
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DB

Duane Bozarth

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 6:25 PM

Dorothy and Richard Shelson wrote:
>
> Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
> screw"? We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
> exist in the US. I think it is far superior to the Phillips. Is that
> what you are referring to?

Pozidrive is another variation of a cross-slot head somewhat similar to
a Phillips..

A Robertson certainly can be obtained in the US altho the "square-head"
moniker is more common. There can be a slight difference in cam angle
of various variations.

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 12:38 AM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when Dave Hinz <[email protected]>
wrote:

>Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.

And Phillips was itself an improvement on Reed, which had skinny slots
and screwdriver bits that broke.

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 1:32 AM

Swingman wrote:

> Or be doomed to an eternity of peeling off those ^$%# INDIVIDUAL stickers
> that now come on every tomato, bell pepper and anything that looks like a
> vegetable in the supermarket.

You're supposed to peel those off?

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 1:42 AM

Dave Hinz wrote:

> Wow. If you're screwing up Torx screws, you might be using
> one size too small of a bit. It'll fit, but it'll strip much
> easier. I don't think you _can_ strip a Torx screw with the right
> size bit.

I did say "sometimes." The little pointy star shaped hole will turn into a
useless round hole if the head is corroded enough. Think old car
applications. I've mostly seen Torx screws on cars.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

b

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 6:02 PM


>foggytown wrote:
>> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
>> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
>> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
>> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
>> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>>
>> FoggyTown
>>



On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 00:17:02 GMT, Dorothy and Richard Shelson
<[email protected]> wrote:

>Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
>screw"? We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
>exist in the US. I think it is far superior to the Phillips. Is that
>what you are referring to?
>
>Richard Shelson
>

nope. robertson (square drive) is available in the US. it's not even
all that uncommon. pozi-drive is a system that looks almost just
exactly like a phillips, but it isn't compatible. it was designed to
*not* cam out when the screw seats, unlike phillips, which was
designed *to* cam out when the screw seats....

nn

nospambob

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 9:12 AM

I read that the USA screws are different design, tapered square recess
I think, and are identified as "square" drive. Bondhus makes a ball
end screwdriver for each of the four sizes color coded handles for
size identification. Similar to the ball end allen drivers they make.
Drive either 15° or 25° of axis, handy in tight quarters.

On Sat, 05 Mar 2005 01:06:57 -0000, [email protected]
(Robert Bonomi) wrote:

>In article <[email protected]>,
>Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>>On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 00:17:02 GMT, Dorothy and Richard Shelson
>><[email protected]> wrote:
>>> Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
>>> screw"?
>>
>>Looks enough like a Phillips to confuse the unwary, but doesn't fit
>>a Phillips bit very well at all. Works excellent with the right
>>bits, though.
>>
>>> We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
>>> exist in the US.
>>
>>We call that "square drive screws" here, the only people I've ever
>>seen call it the Robertson are Canadians (he was Canadian, I'd guess).
>
>Robertson _invented_ em. Robertson is a *brand* name. Robertson gets
>_really_ upset if somebody refers to "Robertson Screws" that are not
>*manufactured* by Robertson. Robertson _is_ a Canadian Company.
>
>Hence 'similar' screws by other manufacturers are called "something else".
>
>
>You can get genuine Robertsons in the U.S., if you look in the right
>places, but they are significantly more expensive than "something else". :)

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 2:59 PM

Robert Bonomi wrote:

> According to the State of California, those _labels_ contain ingredients
> that are known to cause cancer. Yet, Calif. =REQUIRES= them on edible
> products. *sigh*

But I'm sure the vegetables are known to the state of California to cause
cancer too, so it's no problem.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 9:02 AM


"CW" wrote in message
> Those packages are easily dealt with on the scroll saw.

Damn! ... there's the justification for getting a bandsaw for the kitchen.


--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


EP

"Edwin Pawlowski"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 3:10 PM


"Swingman" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
>
> "G.E.R.R.Y." wrote in message
>
>> The worst for me by far is the same packaging for an SD card for a
>> digital camera. The SD card is literally the size of a postage stamp
>> and is enclosed in one of those packages about 12in. by 6in. whose
>> partially ripped edges can turn into a scary sharp weapon which can
>> draw blood. I've never seen anything so stupidly packaged. DAMHIKT

Theft prevention. Harder to slip into a pocket or purse. Try putting the
cards in a small packet or very easy open large package, hang them on a
hook, and see how long they last.


> Jet Printer ink cartridges ... a close second.
>

HP has improved considerably over the old packages. Now it only takes 15
minutes and two tools to open them.

Cc

"CW"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 9:35 PM

Those packages are easily dealt with on the scroll saw.

"G.E.R.R.Y." <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:060320050020480172%[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>, Swingman
> <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> > Ever try to get a modern, small hand tool out of one of those molded, 10
ga
> > plastic, armored "packages" that someone, somewhere, thinks is necessary
...
> > and without another sharp, previously purchased hand tool?
>
> The worst for me by far is the same packaging for an SD card for a
> digital camera. The SD card is literally the size of a postage stamp
> and is enclosed in one of those packages about 12in. by 6in. whose
> partially ripped edges can turn into a scary sharp weapon which can
> draw blood. I've never seen anything so stupidly packaged. DAMHIKT
>
> Gerry

DD

David

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 12:37 PM

I beg to differ. I'll take a Posi over a Phillips any day of the week.

Dave

foggytown wrote:

> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> FoggyTown
>

Da

Dorothy and Richard Shelson

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 6:30 AM

Hi Buck:

While I didn't catch the thread you refer to earlier I have been told
that such screws are so infrequent in the US that rather than find a
screwdriver that will work with them people just use a pry bar to break
boxes from Canada apart. That may be Urban Legend but I too am curious.

Richard

Buck Frobisher wrote:
> "Dave Hinz" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 17:06:33 -0500, Buck Frobisher <[email protected]>
>>wrote:
>>
>>>You can blame Henry Ford's greed and P. L. Robertson's stubbornness if
>>>you
>>>regret the non-availability in the U.S. even today.
>>
>>Of Ford's greed, there's little doubt, but I've been buying Robertson
>>hardware for more than a decade in normal retail hardware outlets. The
>>non-availability of which you speak doesn't exist.
>
>
> If you mean to say that Robertson screws and drivers became available 10
> years ago, then mazel tov! I didn't know that had happened. I suppose that
> 70 years is enough time for it to catch on.
>
> But, judging by what I have heard in the past, and some of the comments here
> regarding "Canadian screws" (remember the crowbar story earlier in this
> thread?) I would say that, in general, Robertson is almost completely
> unknown in the US.
>
> Am I wrong, folks?
>

WK

"Wayne K."

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 9:35 AM

Like adding a simple electric circuit to the shop. You need to 3-4 diff.
size square drive bits. Why cant they make them the same size?
I like square drive, but changing bits to do a simple chore drives me crazy.
I just use the phillps when doing electric.


"Silvan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Dave Hinz wrote:
>
>> Wow. If you're screwing up Torx screws, you might be using
>> one size too small of a bit. It'll fit, but it'll strip much
>> easier. I don't think you _can_ strip a Torx screw with the right
>> size bit.
>
> I did say "sometimes." The little pointy star shaped hole will turn into
> a
> useless round hole if the head is corroded enough. Think old car
> applications. I've mostly seen Torx screws on cars.
>
> --
> Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
> Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
> http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
> http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

Cc

"CW"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 6:11 PM

You were told wrong.

"Dorothy and Richard Shelson" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:2ONVd.568004$6l.312596@pd7tw2no...
We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
> exist in the US.

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 8:53 PM

"Silvan" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Unisaw A100 wrote:
>
> > Robatoy wrote:
> >>The guy who invented the slotted screw should be forced to listen to
> >>Celine Dion.
> >
> > And Gordon Lightfoot.
> >
> > And Anne Murray.
> >
> > In one continuous sitting.
>
> Cher.

Or be doomed to an eternity of peeling off those ^$%# INDIVIDUAL stickers
that now come on every tomato, bell pepper and anything that looks like a
vegetable in the supermarket.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04

LM

"Lee Michaels"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 11:18 AM


"Dave Hinz" <[email protected]> wrote
>
> Yup, although that one tends to be awfully emotionally charged, and people
> with the inferior technology (Windows) usually don't know enough about
> the better one (Macs) to know any better. With screws that are obviously
> hard to use, vs. screws that don't suck at all, it's easier to be
> objective.
>
It is also much easier to be objective if you are the screwor as opposed to
the screwee. :)



Bb

"Beej-in-GA"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 7:02 PM


"Robert Bonomi" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> In article <[email protected]>,
> Silvan <[email protected]> wrote:
>>Swingman wrote:
>>
>>> Or be doomed to an eternity of peeling off those ^$%# INDIVIDUAL
>>> stickers
>>> that now come on every tomato, bell pepper and anything that looks like
>>> a
>>> vegetable in the supermarket.
>>
>>You're supposed to peel those off?
>
> According to the State of California, those _labels_ contain ingredients
> that are known to cause cancer. Yet, Calif. =REQUIRES= them on edible
> products. *sigh*
>
That's the left coast for you.
Beej
Still working on the big damned chainsaw.
>

Da

Dorothy and Richard Shelson

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 6:23 AM

Thanks Duane. That helps.

Richard

Duane Bozarth wrote:
> Dorothy and Richard Shelson wrote:
>
>>Sorry to come in from left field but I need to ask. What IS a "posi
>>screw"? We have in Canada a Robertson screw which I am told does not
>>exist in the US. I think it is far superior to the Phillips. Is that
>>what you are referring to?
>
>
> Pozidrive is another variation of a cross-slot head somewhat similar to
> a Phillips..
>
> A Robertson certainly can be obtained in the US altho the "square-head"
> moniker is more common. There can be a slight difference in cam angle
> of various variations.

RV

"Ray V"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 8:30 PM

explanations for different screw types under Connector Techology.
http://www.hafeleonline.com/usa/support/faq.html
Pozis are used extensively for automotive interiors, look closely next time
you get in your car.

--

Too much is not enough!
rvojtash NOT THIS at comcast (dot) net
---

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 5:44 PM


"Silvan" wrote in message
> Swingman wrote:
>
> >> > vegetable in the supermarket.
> >>
> >> You're supposed to peel those off?
> >
> > Well, you can leave them on, but they're real tough to floss off your
> > shiny brites. (not a bad idea, though ... just make them edible and
> > fortified with vitamins).
> >
> > Besides, like many other "unnecessary complications" in a modern life
> > dictated by corporate whims, they are there for the convenience of the
> > corporation, not the customer.
>
> Well, you can argue both sides of this one. For the convenience of the
> corporation, yes, by allowing computerized scanning and whatnot. For the
> convenience of the customer too, though, so your cashier doesn't have to
> remember 700 PLU numbers, or sit there flipping through a stack of cards
> every time you bring some wierd Chinese vegetable to the register.

OK, by gawd ... let's argue. :)

Cashiers worthy of the name were once required to know/memorize produce
prices. Now, since the MBA mentality has made it an ultra low wage position,
the register is often smarter than the cashier. I am actually inconvenienced
more often by waiting for a price check from someone in front of me, or by
the need for a "manager" to take some action or other that the cashier can
no longer handle.

Net result ... I spend no less time in check out than in the past.

> Saves
> you, the customer, time.

Not when I get them home and start to cook ... I lose any time that might
have been saved at check-out getting the damned labels OFF. :)

Besides, the check-out lines are longer than ever because of reduced
staffing, more than making up for any saved time by puttting labels on each
damn vegetable, the application of same which is built-in to price I must
pay ... thanks again to the corporate, MBA mentality.

Net result ... I was much better, in both time and money, with dumber
vegetables and smarter cashiers!

> Having a sticker on everything also decreases
> your chances of getting charged incorrectly when the cashier doesn't know
a
> winesap from a McIntosh from a red delicious too, or can't tell the
> difference between celery and cilantro, or lettuce and cabbage.

As a prudent, price conscious, informed consumer, that's MY job.

I know, I know ... there aren't that many of us left. :)

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04



UA

Unisaw A100

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 10:50 AM

Robatoy wrote:
>The guy who invented the slotted screw should be forced to listen to
>Celine Dion.

And Gordon Lightfoot.

And Anne Murray.

In one continuous sitting.

Seriously though, the guy who invented the slotted screw
was a genius considering the alternative of the day. It's
the guys who continue to make them/force them on us,
they should be the ones forced to listen to Celine, Gordon,
Anne and (insert your fingers on a chalkboard celebrity
singer here).

UA100

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 11:23 AM

Unisaw A100 wrote:

> Robatoy wrote:
>>The guy who invented the slotted screw should be forced to listen to
>>Celine Dion.
>
> And Gordon Lightfoot.
>
> And Anne Murray.
>
> In one continuous sitting.

Cher.

> Seriously though, the guy who invented the slotted screw
> was a genius considering the alternative of the day. It's
> the guys who continue to make them/force them on us,

It's kinda funny, actually. I haven't used any of those Roberson screws, so
maybe, just maybe, they're actually different. I hate Phillips and Allen
screws because they strip out too easily, and you have to turn them into
slotted screws to get them out. Torx screws are a little better, but
still, sometimes you have to turn them into slotted screws to get them out.
Personally, therefore, I prefer slotted screws for many applications. Like
any application where I might have to remove the screw some day. Or lag
screws, even better, if I can use them.

> they should be the ones forced to listen to Celine, Gordon,
> Anne and (insert your fingers on a chalkboard celebrity
> singer here).

Cher, Cher, Cher.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

Wn

Will

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 7:26 PM

You mean Robertson screws I think. LOL


patrick conroy wrote:
> "foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
> news:[email protected]...
>
>>annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
>>to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
>
> Sorry FoggyT - you're on your own there. I'm a McFeely's Convert.
>
>

--
Will
Occasional Techno-geek

pc

"patrick conroy"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 10:40 PM


"foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.

Sorry FoggyT - you're on your own there. I'm a McFeely's Convert.

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 10:41 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
"foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote:

> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> FoggyTown
>

PosiDrive screws were designed for automatic-feed screwdriving robots.
You can tell them from a Philips by noticing that there are small lines
eminating from the centre of the screw-head at a 45 degree angle from
the main slots.
Robertson screws don't work in automated-feed machines because the
driver-bit can (at 45 degrees where the bit refuses to enter the hole)
jam the machine.
McFeely makes great screws...good steel and they stick to the driver
nicely.
The guy who invented the slotted screw should be forced to listen to
Celine Dion.

0¿0
˜

Rob

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 10:28 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 3 Mar 2005 12:59:03 -0800, Ray <[email protected]> wrote:
> > I'll second that! Mac is far better than Windows.
>
> Yes, that's another good example. Windows is very popular, but then
> again, many people get the common cold...

There are more cockroaches than people on this planet.
Superior numbers do not denote a higher life-form.

Rd

Robatoy

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 10:18 PM

In article <[email protected]>,
Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:

> On 3 Mar 2005 12:33:28 -0800, foggytown <[email protected]> wrote:
> > Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> > Phillips to begin with?
>
> Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.
>
> > It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> > and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> > annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> > to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> Well, Betamax was superior to VHS in image quality, just as Posi is
> better than Phillips for actually turning a screw. Popularity and
> quality have a relationship that is coincidental at best.
>
> Dave Hinz
>

Macs and Window boxes.

TD

Tim Douglass

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 9:14 PM

On 5 Mar 2005 03:59:03 GMT, Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:

>On Fri, 4 Mar 2005 16:53:57 -0800, Larry Blanchard <[email protected]> wrote:
>> In article <[email protected]>, [email protected]
>> says...
>>> Dave "I'll never tape and mud drywall again. And this time I mean it." Hinz
>>>
>> Another subject we agree on :-).
>
>Dang. This is getting scary. But you know, when there are people good
>at it, willing to work for...reasonable terms... (as in, I'll clean all
>the viruses and spyware off your Windows box if you tape and mud this
>room for me terms), it's just not gonna be me doing it. 'hate' is too
>gentle of a word.

Done a lot of it. I find it one of the most enjoyable of all
construction phases. Different strokes, huh?

"We need to make a sacrifice to the gods, find me a young virgin... oh, and bring something to kill"

Tim Douglass

http://www.DouglassClan.com

AD

Andy Dingley

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

14/03/2005 1:49 AM

It was somewhere outside Barstow when "G.E.R.R.Y."
<[email protected]> wrote:

> I've never seen anything so stupidly packaged. DAMHIKT

Place an order with Dallas Semiconductor.

Three chips. Each in its own 12" long FedEx package across the pond.

DD

David

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 4:46 PM

That would be "Reed & Prince".

Dave

Andy Dingley wrote:

> It was somewhere outside Barstow when Dave Hinz <[email protected]>
> wrote:
>
>
>>Because it doesn't cam out nearly as badly as the Phillips.
>
>
> And Phillips was itself an improvement on Reed, which had skinny slots
> and screwdriver bits that broke.

UA

Unisaw A100

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 10:41 PM

Silvan wrote:
>Cher.


Cher's Fair Well Tour.

The best four words ever spoken/written.

Now, let's see if it sticks.

UA100

LZ

"Luigi Zanasi"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 11:09 PM

On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 21:14:43 -0800, Tim Douglass wrote:

> On 5 Mar 2005 03:59:03 GMT, Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>
>>Dang. This is getting scary. But you know, when there are people good
>>at it, willing to work for...reasonable terms... (as in, I'll clean all
>>the viruses and spyware off your Windows box if you tape and mud this
>>room for me terms), it's just not gonna be me doing it. 'hate' is too
>>gentle of a word.
>
> Done a lot of it. I find it one of the most enjoyable of all
> construction phases. Different strokes, huh?

You ARE weird!

--
Luigi
Replace "nonet" with "yukonomics" for real email
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/humour.html
www.yukonomics.ca/wooddorking/antifaq.html

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 9:03 AM


"G.E.R.R.Y." wrote in message

> The worst for me by far is the same packaging for an SD card for a
> digital camera. The SD card is literally the size of a postage stamp
> and is enclosed in one of those packages about 12in. by 6in. whose
> partially ripped edges can turn into a scary sharp weapon which can
> draw blood. I've never seen anything so stupidly packaged. DAMHIKT

Jet Printer ink cartridges ... a close second.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


TD

Tim Douglass

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

07/03/2005 10:00 AM

On Sun, 06 Mar 2005 23:09:13 +0000, "Luigi Zanasi" <[email protected]>
wrote:

>On Fri, 04 Mar 2005 21:14:43 -0800, Tim Douglass wrote:
>
>> On 5 Mar 2005 03:59:03 GMT, Dave Hinz <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>>Dang. This is getting scary. But you know, when there are people good
>>>at it, willing to work for...reasonable terms... (as in, I'll clean all
>>>the viruses and spyware off your Windows box if you tape and mud this
>>>room for me terms), it's just not gonna be me doing it. 'hate' is too
>>>gentle of a word.
>>
>> Done a lot of it. I find it one of the most enjoyable of all
>> construction phases. Different strokes, huh?
>
>You ARE weird!

I always loved going into a house to start a drywall job. You would
look around and it would be all studs with wiring and plumbing
showing. In just a couple of days it would go to being rooms, with
real walls. Then the taping would take it to the next level, where the
walls looked *finished*. There is an intense satisfaction in it for
me. Much like getting a good finish on a woodworking project. You can
walk out feeling like you've actually made something.

Oh, incidentally, many people have accused me of being weird, but not
usually in that context.

--
"We need to make a sacrifice to the gods, find me a young virgin... oh, and bring something to kill"

Tim Douglass

http://www.DouglassClan.com

Ba

B a r r y

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 12:21 PM

Unisaw A100 wrote:

> And Anne Murray.
>

She would make me want to bang my head against a spinning table saw
blade. How anyone can listen to her and not kill themselves is beyond me.

Barry

Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

06/03/2005 11:28 AM

Swingman wrote:

> OK, by gawd ... let's argue. :)

> Net result ... I was much better, in both time and money, with dumber
> vegetables and smarter cashiers!

OK, you win.

>> winesap from a McIntosh from a red delicious too, or can't tell the
>> difference between celery and cilantro, or lettuce and cabbage.
>
> As a prudent, price conscious, informed consumer, that's MY job.
>
> I know, I know ... there aren't that many of us left. :)

Seriously, the problem is that you customers know what you're buying, but
those of you who are buying the weird stuff don't speak English very well.
When I worked at a certain gigantic retailer, we had a staggering array of
ethnic foods in the produce department, and I had no clue what most of that
stuff was. When the customers told me what it was, it wasn't terribly
helpful trying to figure out what that was on the little list.

I'm glad those days are behind me. Worst job on earth. I'd rather wade
waist deep in pig shit.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

bb

"bob"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

03/03/2005 10:20 PM

My old Marantz 8-track tape player is hooked up to my stereo system and
plays my old Johnny Cash 8-tracks just as good as the day I bought it.


"foggytown" <[email protected]> wrote in message
news:[email protected]...
> Why the hell was the posi screw invented when we had perfectly good
> Phillips to begin with? It isn't that easy to tell one from the other
> and when you use the wrong bit on the wrong screw head it is REALLY
> annoying. As far as I'm concerend, posi head screws can be consigned
> to the same pit as Betamax and 8 tracks.
>
> FoggyTown
>

Sk

"Swingman"

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 7:09 AM

"Silvan" wrote in message
> Swingman wrote:
>
> > Or be doomed to an eternity of peeling off those ^$%# INDIVIDUAL
stickers
> > that now come on every tomato, bell pepper and anything that looks like
a
> > vegetable in the supermarket.
>
> You're supposed to peel those off?

Well, you can leave them on, but they're real tough to floss off your shiny
brites. (not a bad idea, though ... just make them edible and fortified with
vitamins).

Besides, like many other "unnecessary complications" in a modern life
dictated by corporate whims, they are there for the convenience of the
corporation, not the customer.

Ever try to get a modern, small hand tool out of one of those molded, 10 ga
plastic, armored "packages" that someone, somewhere, thinks is necessary ...
and without another sharp, previously purchased hand tool?

No doubt about it, there is an organized, shadowy effort to aggravate, with
seemingly inconsequential roadblocks and potholes, that add up to an
increase in daily frustration.

--
www.e-woodshop.net
Last update: 11/06/04


Sd

Silvan

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

05/03/2005 2:16 PM

Swingman wrote:

>> > vegetable in the supermarket.
>>
>> You're supposed to peel those off?
>
> Well, you can leave them on, but they're real tough to floss off your
> shiny brites. (not a bad idea, though ... just make them edible and
> fortified with vitamins).
>
> Besides, like many other "unnecessary complications" in a modern life
> dictated by corporate whims, they are there for the convenience of the
> corporation, not the customer.

Well, you can argue both sides of this one. For the convenience of the
corporation, yes, by allowing computerized scanning and whatnot. For the
convenience of the customer too, though, so your cashier doesn't have to
remember 700 PLU numbers, or sit there flipping through a stack of cards
every time you bring some wierd Chinese vegetable to the register. Saves
you, the customer, time. Having a sticker on everything also decreases
your chances of getting charged incorrectly when the cashier doesn't know a
winesap from a McIntosh from a red delicious too, or can't tell the
difference between celery and cilantro, or lettuce and cabbage.

I've been on the cashier side of that. Especially with Asian customers.
Some wad of green. What the hell is this anyway? "It
bongchockfojinshooifong kwa." OK, can you spell that? No? Screw it,
bananas it is. :)

> Ever try to get a modern, small hand tool out of one of those molded, 10
> ga plastic, armored "packages" that someone, somewhere, thinks is
> necessary ... and without another sharp, previously purchased hand tool?

Yes. The most retarded thing ever. Dad is a tool loser. I bought him a
fold-out molded plastic tray full of tools, and he managed to keep track of
them for years, until the plastic latch broke on the carrier. So this past
December I bought him a new one. I got it at Lowe's. It had quality name
brand (for whatever that's worth, since they were all still Chinese) tools
in it, and had most of the bases covered, on sale for about $60 I think.

Hammer, knife, screwdrivers, wrenches, the whole nine yards. It was covered
in a molded sheet of plastic that was screwed down in about 30 places. A
person buying an item like this, an all-in-one set of gift tools, it's a
safe bet the person on the receiving end doesn't have any tools. This is
the kind of thing you might give your kid when you send him off to college
or something. So WTF was the deal with all the screws that I couldn't get
out without the screwdriver that was trapped inside by the damn screwes?
WTF were they thinking?!

> No doubt about it, there is an organized, shadowy effort to aggravate,
> with seemingly inconsequential roadblocks and potholes, that add up to an
> increase in daily frustration.

Or, sigh, to reduce theft anyway... That's why the new packaging is such a
PITA.

--
Michael McIntyre ---- Silvan <[email protected]>
Linux fanatic, and certified Geek; registered Linux user #243621
http://www.geocities.com/Paris/Rue/5407/
http://rosegarden.sourceforge.net/tutorial/

sD

[email protected] (Doug Miller)

in reply to "foggytown" on 03/03/2005 12:33 PM

04/03/2005 6:27 PM

In article <[email protected]>, Silvan <[email protected]> wrote:

>Personally, therefore, I prefer slotted screws for many applications. Like
>any application where I might have to remove the screw some day.

If you ever need to remove the screw, the Robertson (square-drive) head is
*far* easier to use than a slot.

>Or lag screws, even better, if I can use them.

Yabbut... they're not very aesthetically pleasing. :-)

--
Regards,
Doug Miller (alphageek at milmac dot com)

Nobody ever left footprints in the sands of time by sitting on his butt.
And who wants to leave buttprints in the sands of time?


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