
Oh my god, where do I start? 12 years ago my mother gave me a bright yellow Teeny Turner. We didn't get along very well at the time and rarely saw each other eye-to-eye, but she noticed that my toys seemed to be lying around collecting dust - dust from assembling or disassembling computers. That's how she thought about it. and decided to give me useful things instead of """fun""" (according to toy companies) things. She bought me Tiny Turner. I can say without hesitation that this is one of my most prized possessions. I haven't found a single tool that has been touched, handled, used or abused more than this little yellow driver. It's not due to a lack of competition or sentimentality. My father is a carpenter and has been collecting tools for decades. He has hundreds of screwdrivers, no exaggeration. They are all available to me from cheap dockside freight scrap to very high quality isolated drivers for electricians and extremely accurate custom bits for electronics. Tons of options. When I first got the Tini Turner, I kind of mocked him. I had a prejudice against replaceable tip drivers - they were usually flimsy, rattling, with soft steel tips that inevitably disappeared where the socks were. So I threw it in a drawer and kept borrowing my dad's beats. I once needed a very short screwdriver for a torx screw in a tight spot, so I pulled a tiny turner from that drawer. It never returned. But why? Of the hundreds of screwdrivers I can use, why do I always fall back on the short yellow one? let me count the ways 1) size. The reason I needed it in the first place is still its main benefit. It fits where other screwdrivers won't and without the hassle of angled screwdrivers or ratchets. 2) clutch. It feels good in the hand. Really good. No matter how tight the space or how awkward the corner, I always feel like I can get a good grip on the knobby plastic handle. 3) blades. The blade set that comes with the driver is darn fine steel. Phillips sockets *do not* become blunt. They stay sharp and bite hard. Sometimes, for some reason, I use a different screwdriver and the Phillips head gets ripped off. Happens to the best of us and can completely ruin a project. 9 times out of 10 I can twist a little, bite very slowly and carefully, and pull the screw out. How many stripped screws did I not have to drill, rethread, or tap a tap? A lot of. Very much. This is especially important when repairing electronics where there are no substitutes. Just a few weeks ago I opened up my laptop to clean it and fix a bad connection to one of the USB ports. One of the Phillips case's main screws has been largely cut out. Enter DD. He bites the screw, pulls it out the first time. Screwed it back in with no problems. There will be no spare screw at all. Working with the young wood turner I bent 1 blade: the largest with a flat head and I (from) used it as a crowbar. It is still fully functional, just a little wavy. Okay, base is loaded. Tiny Turner goes to the plate. Spectators fall silent β will it be a Grand Slam? innings 4) blade storage. It's the home run that ties it all together. Remember how I said swappable bit drivers usually rattle, with non-intuitive storage requiring disassembly of the driver? Tiny Turner is done with it. The slots on the outside of the handle are ideal for spare blades. A single blade is always used, attached (safely) to a magnetized central axis. The remaining 6 bits are in slots. The tip of each bit is visible from the outside. To change the active nozzle, pull it, insert it into the slot of the desired nozzle, and then attach the already opened desired one to the shaft. I know it's just high praise anyway. I think it's absolutely brilliant. If you use Teeny Turner normally, there will never be a case where two beats go out of their slots at the same time because you have to insert a beat to take the beat out. You can't lose her because the tool forces her back to safety. Brilliant design. Okay, I like Teeny Turner. I was aimlessly browsing the site when I came across this set. I almost missed it as the brand name doesn't ring a bell, but one look at the picture revealed my favorite rider - teenage Turner - along with TWO big siblings. And cheap. That's why I bought them. You are perfect. To be honest, Teeny Turner was perfect on its own. The only limitation was the very large screws - the bits just aren't big enough. Now that I have the whole family, that's no problem. Lolok, everyone needs some screwdrivers. I don't care if you're the least mechanical person on the planet - you should at least have a nice bold cross cut, a nice bold flat, and a more accurate version of each. Whether you buy them individually or as a set, they either cost a lot of money or are quite cheap. Do yourself a favor and grab this set. This is the best I've ever had and while I strongly believe these tools will outlive me, if I do manage to lose or break one I will go back and buy another.

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