Put timing chains on a Ford v6 without a torx plus 55 and let us know how that went.
Comment on I'm just gonna stick to slotted, thanks
Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee 4 months agoUse torx all the time on not only building sites, but in machinery repair too.
There’s only one type of torx and I think OP is winding us up :)
InternetUser2012@lemmy.today 4 months ago
renzev@lemmy.world 4 months ago
There isn’t. There’s Torx, Torx Plus, and Torx Paralobe. See here for more details: www.semblex.com/en/…/torx-paralobe-pdf/ . Plus there’s also the ttap and tamper-resistant variants shown in the meme.
As other people have mentioned, Torx screwdrivers are forwards compatible with Torx Plus and Torx Paralobe. But the screwdrivers for the newer standards are not backwards compatible with older screws.
Similarly, Tamper-Resistant Torx screwdrivers can be used on regular Torx screws. But Tamper-Resistant Torx Plus screwdrivers cannot be used on regular Torx Plus screws – it’s a completely different shape!
If you’re in a professional setting where you order high-quality screws and drivers in bulk directly from a manufacturer, I’d imagine that this isn’t much of an issue. But if you’re a hobbyist or just need to repair something in a domestic setting, the three different torx variants plus the other non-torx hexalobular screws (WA drive, Polydrive, T-Star Plus) can cause quite a bit of confusion. Anecdotally, I have a set of what I thought were really low-quality Torx bits. Turns out, they’re actually good-quality Torx Plus bits that by design don’t fit my Torx screws.
Hugh_Jeggs@lemm.ee 4 months ago
Yeah that’s just what Big Torx wants us to think man