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In a previous article, "Private" said:
Being a Canadian, I am also a big fan of the Roberson square screw and think they are superior to the Phillips in every way. IIRC there is some real historical chauvinism that resulted in the use of the Phillips design in the USA and the rejection of the superior Robertson. Look at the Wikipedia article http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robertson_screwdriver According to it, Henry Ford wanted to use Robertson screws on Fords, but Robertson had been screwed (sorry) by a previous licensee and refused to license any other screw manufacturer to make them. Ford decided that he wouldn't trust a single sourced screw, so went to something else. And thus, Robertson missed his chance to have Robertson screws become very common in the US. -- Paul Tomblin http://blog.xcski.com/ "They that can give up essential liberty to obtain a little temporary safety deserve neither liberty nor safety" - Ben Franklin |
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On Mar 3, 2:16 pm, (Paul Tomblin) wrote:
In a previous article, "Private" said: Being a Canadian, I am also a big fan of the Roberson square screw and think they are superior to the Phillips in every way. IIRC there is some real historical chauvinism that resulted in the use of the Phillips design in the USA and the rejection of the superior Robertson. Look at the Wikipedia articlehttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robertson_screwdriver According to it, Henry Ford wanted to use Robertson screws on Fords, but Robertson had been screwed (sorry) by a previous licensee and refused to license any other screw manufacturer to make them. Ford decided that he wouldn't trust a single sourced screw, so went to something else. And thus, Robertson missed his chance to have Robertson screws become very common in the US. I heard it a bit differently. Ford was used to getting his way and when he ran into Robertson's stubbornness he actively blocked the sale of those screws in the U.S. I can't see furniture manufacturers, for one, not wanting to use them. Even antique Canadian furniture is full of them. I've driven thousands of them into wooden boats I've built, and we get Robertson "decking" screws here that are good for a thousand uses and are sold by the pound. I imagine they're available in the US by now. Softer screws still get the Roberson socket torn out of them. They're not perfect. Torx screws have the best driving system but they don't sit on the driver so well, not having any sort of taper to wedge them on so you can poke them into some inaccessible spot. Robertsons do that very well. Dan |
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