A case in point:

When it comes to driving a screw into a material (like wood) in which the screw creates the mating helix itself when first driven in, you might find it helpful to hammer a small portion of the screw into the receiving part, so the screw "gets an initial hold". It is much easier then to drive it fully in. Note that you do not need a heavy hammer and in fact, using a heavy hammer in such cases might even be counter-productive, since you would lose the sense of precision/accuracy required: you would want to hammer only as much of the screw into the wood as is needed for the screw to get "an initial hold" in the receiving material and no more -- if you want to take advantage of the greater holding power of a mating helix.

P.

Scott Ribe wrote:
I've never used a hammer to put in a screw.

So I guess you're one of those ivory-tower theory-purist academic types, at
least when it comes to home repairs. As a more practical person myself, let
me just say that sometimes a 3lb hammer is exactly the right tool to get a
screw set in quickly ;-)



---------------------------(end of broadcast)---------------------------
TIP 9: In versions below 8.0, the planner will ignore your desire to
      choose an index scan if your joining column's datatypes do not
      match

Reply via email to