• @Pothetato
    link
    1222 hours ago

    In my experience, Phillips heads strip more often than Robertson.

    • @[email protected]
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      fedilink
      1018 hours ago

      Torx > Hex > Robertson > Pozidriv > Phillips > Slot.

      This is not (just) the ramblings of a mad nerd, but objective fact derived from contact area between screwdriver and screw.

      In practice hex does have one situational advantage over Torx, namely that they are almost always tightened with Allen keys which are more torque-y and can be used in tight spaces. For every other application Torx wins. Every other head type is strictly inferior and only exists for legacy or penny-saving reasons.

      • @marcos
        link
        218 hours ago

        What they don’t say is that the smaller the features on the contact, the easier it is to strip them. This almost reverses the order on your post depending on the way you tighten the screw.

        • @[email protected]
          link
          fedilink
          49 hours ago

          For hex yes, for Torx no. Your smartphone’s itty bitty screws are quite possibly T4 or similar.

          • @marcos
            link
            13 hours ago

            Torx is more resilient to over-torsion than Hex, but both of them will end near the end of the list on that one metric, with slot first, and way ahead of anything else.

            Despite what the Torx publicity says, engineering is done over a multitude of dimensions, and that one dimension Torx wins may not be nearly as important as some other random one.

    • @SirSamuel
      link
      118 hours ago

      Ngl if I didn’t have impact drivers I’d probably hate Phillips screws a whole lot more