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  2. List of screw drives - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_screw_drives

    Slot screw drives have a single horizontal indentation (the slot) in the fastener head and is driven by a "common blade" or flat-bladed screwdriver.This form was the first type of screw drive to be developed, and, for centuries, it was the simplest and cheapest to make because it can just be sawed or filed.

  3. Screwdriver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screwdriver

    The tool used to drive a slotted screw head is called a standard, common blade, flat-blade, slot-head, straight, flat, flat-tip, [6] or "flat-head" [7] screwdriver. This last usage can be confusing, because the term flat-head also describes a screw with a flat top, designed to install in a countersunk hole .

  4. Screw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Screw

    An electric driver screws a self-tapping phillips head screw into wood. The hand tool used to drive in most screws is called a screwdriver. A power tool that does the same job is a power screwdriver; power drills may also be used with screw-driving attachments.

  5. Torque screwdriver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torque_screwdriver

    The clutch is the component that defines a torque screwdriver. This is achieved with steel balls rolling between indented plates, compressed by a spring at one end, and the other side driving a screw or fastener.

  6. Robertson screw - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robertson_screw

    The contemporary square drive screw has all but replaced the Robertson screw proper and is commonly referred to as a Robertson because it has practically identical drive dimensions and the same colour identification system, but the contemporary square drive socket has parallel sides rather than tapered.

  7. Torx - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torx

    A Torx T8 screw head on a hard disk drive. Torx (pronounced / t ɔːr k s /) is a trademark for a type of screw drive characterized by a 6-point star-shaped pattern, developed in 1967 [1] by Camcar Textron. [a] A popular generic name for the drive is star, as in star screwdriver or star bits.