richg99
Well-known member
Ever have a problem starting an aluminum or Stainless screw when the hole is deep down some crevice? They are not magnetic, so they present their own set of issues.
I make my own rod holders. A piece of 1 1/4 light-weight PVC; a heat gun ( or your wife's hair dryer)..and a wine bottle is all that I need to make any length holder.
I like to mount them on my little tinny with two Stainless Steel screws. I drill a large hole in the face side and a starter hole in the back of the rod holder. Then, the fun begins. How to hold the Stainless (non-magnetic) Phillips screw head onto my driver???? It is an inch or two away from the face side when I start it into the tinny's metal.
Many years ago, "they" made a device that slipped over the end of your screwdriver. It had two little pinchers that held the screw long enough to get it started. I lost the one I had and haven't seen a similar one in twenty years or so. Since then, I've used forceps; long-nose pliers; held the screwdriver head against the screw and tried to move the whole mess into place. I've dropped a ton of screws that usually fall into an unreachable tight spot. One time, I used my hot-melt glue-gun to stick the screw onto the end of the driver. That worked, too.
A week or two ago, a light bulb went off in my nearly empty head. TAPE!
I took a small piece of masking tape and stuck the point of the screw through it. I then wrapped the sticky side of the tape around my screw-driver. Voila! A screw holder that works with Stainless and aluminum screws! I can reach deep into any crevice and start my screw with this simple deal. See picture below.
I hesitated to post this, because some smart $$$ will, no doubt, post some much simpler way to accomplish this task. Heck, I'd like to hear it....
regards, richg99
I make my own rod holders. A piece of 1 1/4 light-weight PVC; a heat gun ( or your wife's hair dryer)..and a wine bottle is all that I need to make any length holder.
I like to mount them on my little tinny with two Stainless Steel screws. I drill a large hole in the face side and a starter hole in the back of the rod holder. Then, the fun begins. How to hold the Stainless (non-magnetic) Phillips screw head onto my driver???? It is an inch or two away from the face side when I start it into the tinny's metal.
Many years ago, "they" made a device that slipped over the end of your screwdriver. It had two little pinchers that held the screw long enough to get it started. I lost the one I had and haven't seen a similar one in twenty years or so. Since then, I've used forceps; long-nose pliers; held the screwdriver head against the screw and tried to move the whole mess into place. I've dropped a ton of screws that usually fall into an unreachable tight spot. One time, I used my hot-melt glue-gun to stick the screw onto the end of the driver. That worked, too.
A week or two ago, a light bulb went off in my nearly empty head. TAPE!
I took a small piece of masking tape and stuck the point of the screw through it. I then wrapped the sticky side of the tape around my screw-driver. Voila! A screw holder that works with Stainless and aluminum screws! I can reach deep into any crevice and start my screw with this simple deal. See picture below.
I hesitated to post this, because some smart $$$ will, no doubt, post some much simpler way to accomplish this task. Heck, I'd like to hear it....
regards, richg99