Oh yeah. I had an original with those round bits. I had the screwdriver bits, but also a couple drill bits. The little drills for all the world looked like double sided half round chisels.
I used to watch Norm on This Old House or New Yankee Workshop, and they occasionally whipped out this Yankee driver that must have been two feet long - HUGE. But they could give it one push and drive the entire screw into the work. Seems to me they used it in places like basement work screwing things to floor joists above. But pretty cool, just one big shove.
I think I told Tom about this over lunch, but aside from the Yankee and the eggbeater drills, I used my grandfathers auger brace and bits for drilling.
Brace:
Stanley - 5044 Bit Brace 250 Mm 10In - Screwdriver Bits - Amazon.com
I had a 3/8" bit for pots and jacks, but for toggle switches, I needed larger, so I had a countersink bit I usedto enlarge the holes some:
Vintage Hand Brace Countersink Auger Bit Stock Photo, Picture And Royalty Free Image. Pic 5441086.
When I had to make a 1" or larger chassis hole for a tube socket, I had to first drill a circle of small holes, like 1/8", then snip out the central scrap inside my perforation. Then I used a burring ream to grind out to a smooth hole
Burring ream for auger brace:
General No 134 Burring Reamer | eBay
In relatively light aluminum chassis, I could enlarge a 12AX7 size hole to octal with the ream.
Note the drills and other bits for the auger brace had this square tapered base that fits nothing else. The brace had a ratchet function so you could drill in places you had no room for all the way around cranking.
Then one magic Xmas, my folks got me a Black and Decker 3/8" power drill...
I used to watch Norm on This Old House or New Yankee Workshop, and they occasionally whipped out this Yankee driver that must have been two feet long - HUGE. But they could give it one push and drive the entire screw into the work. Seems to me they used it in places like basement work screwing things to floor joists above. But pretty cool, just one big shove.
I think I told Tom about this over lunch, but aside from the Yankee and the eggbeater drills, I used my grandfathers auger brace and bits for drilling.
Brace:
Stanley - 5044 Bit Brace 250 Mm 10In - Screwdriver Bits - Amazon.com
I had a 3/8" bit for pots and jacks, but for toggle switches, I needed larger, so I had a countersink bit I usedto enlarge the holes some:
Vintage Hand Brace Countersink Auger Bit Stock Photo, Picture And Royalty Free Image. Pic 5441086.
When I had to make a 1" or larger chassis hole for a tube socket, I had to first drill a circle of small holes, like 1/8", then snip out the central scrap inside my perforation. Then I used a burring ream to grind out to a smooth hole
Burring ream for auger brace:
General No 134 Burring Reamer | eBay
In relatively light aluminum chassis, I could enlarge a 12AX7 size hole to octal with the ream.
Note the drills and other bits for the auger brace had this square tapered base that fits nothing else. The brace had a ratchet function so you could drill in places you had no room for all the way around cranking.
Then one magic Xmas, my folks got me a Black and Decker 3/8" power drill...
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