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Screwdriver types and which screws they fit
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- Niva Tools editorial
The most useful screwdriver knowledge is matching the driver shape to the screw head correctly so the tool seats fully and does not strip the fastener under pressure.
Most households do not need workshop-grade complexity. They need a few common tools, clearer expectations, and fewer avoidable mistakes at the moment a small job actually starts.
In real households, the value of screwdriver types and which screws they fit shows up when the repair is small, the room is ordinary, and there is not much margin for trial-and-error clutter.
What matters most
Most damage happens before the screw even turns. A poor bit or driver fit removes control immediately and makes both removal and tightening worse.
How to approach it
Learn the common drive families first: Phillips, slotted, Pozidriv, Torx, and hex. Then use the driver that fills the recess cleanly instead of the one that seems close enough.
What usually goes wrong
People often mix Phillips and Pozidriv, or jam a too-small bit into a larger recess. That creates cam-out, rounded heads, and frustration that looks like a material problem.
A practical standard
The useful standard is simple: full fit, firm pressure, and a driver that stays centered. Good fit matters more than brute force in almost every indoor screw job.
Quick checklist
- Test the bit fit before applying turning force.
- Keep a small set of the most common driver types instead of random duplicates.
- Replace worn bits that wobble or slip early.
- Push the driver straight into the screw head instead of twisting from an angle.
Final takeaway
The useful standard for screwdriver types and which screws they fit is not doing more. It is making a smaller set of choices that fit the material, the tool, and the actual risk of the job.
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