IN OTHER NEWS: USPS just delivered my NEJISAURUS PZ-58 screw-chomping pliers.
They are quite delightful: Excellent fit & finish; a joy in the hand. A full report and side by side comparison will be forthcoming when my PZ-57s arrive.
SQUEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEEE!!! TL:DR - They're here! They're effing amazing! I don't effing
CARE that they cost me
$60 $54 !
Here they are stacked for size comparison. PZ-58 are 160mm overall; PZ-57 are 120mm.
It is pretty evident from looking at them side by side (and at the pics of the PZ-56 & PZ-59) that the development of these tools leverages existing raw forgings designed for some other application, then the
NejiSaurus Secret Sauce tool grinding is done to make the finished product. The PZ-56 doesn't have a wire cutter like the PZ-58; it just has a plain flat milled jaw out of which the screw-chomper teeth are ground. Also, it doesn't have spring-retract like the PZ-58.
Here's the business end; PZ-57 have 5mm jaw width/3.5mm jaw height at the tip and are supposed to fit 2mm-3.5mm screw heads. PZ-58 have 7mm jaw width/7mm jaw height at the tip and are supposed to fit 3mm-9.5mm screw heads.
Note that the PZ-58 jaws don't meet like the PZ-57; one could, if one were inclined, change this by grinding out the wire-cutter with a Dremel.
(I know! Sacrilege! )Piranha teeth!!! No, seriously... the serrations are exactly as described: Sharp grippy angles, but ground to an inside curve such that the ends of the jaws pull themselves under the edge of the screw head.
Here you can also see how the head shape is beveled to allow as much clearance around nearby obstacles as possible. Excellent engineering.
And here's the Money Shot:This is my primary use case; these Chinesium button-head screws which come on China-direct 3D Printers are of... questionable quality. Some are so hard they're brittle; some seem to be made of case-hardened cheese.
Whether they fit any standard Allen wrench or none in captivity in the free world, or what exact one you'll get in any particular place on any particular printer seems to be entirely a combination of chance compounded by what was available cheapest by the shipping container-full on AliBaba, etc...
As you can see, both have no problem getting a grip on these total PITA screws that when (not if) they strip out, I usually have to slot with a Dremel unless I get lucky and my easy-outs get a grip instead of just grinding the hole round or eating the head off the shank.
Two claws up from this tool-dwagon!
mnem
Sorry for inflicting big pics on you Vince... in this case, resolution and detail are essential.