Johnsim
Structural
- Jul 18, 2003
- 7
On the occasions that I have worked in the US, (several) I have noted with surprise that square drive screws are not nearly as familiar to American tradespeople as they are to Canadians. The race to patent every conceivable screwhead design was won by a Canadian in the sense that he got the best one. The square drive screw was patented by P.L.Robertson in 1911 and is still manufactured in the small Ontario city, Milton, where he established his factory, now Robertson-Whitehouse. These fasteners and the matching screwdriving tools are always referred to as Robertsons or "Robbies" by the trades up here but always advertised in US supply catalogues as "square drive", sometimes with the addition of adjectives like "revolutionary" I have heard that there was great opposition to their introduction into the US back in the day by the American makers (because they didn't hold the patents and the screws were better in use than theirs) and that there were even legislative measures taken to exclude Robertson screws. I have never known whether to credit this or not. I tend to think there is something to it, since the American trades that use them for the first time, love them. They stay on the driving tool when driven by hand or with a screwgun. Slot heads are rubbish to anyone who installs large numbers of fasteners and drivers on Phillips fasteners cam out very easily, usually making a mess of the screwhead, which doesn't matter in drywall screws but does when the screws are soft brass and are securing hinges that cost fifty bucks a set. Is anyone aware of why these excellent little devices have appeared in the world's most developed economy only in the last twenty or so years?