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Feel the Bass

Started by sawtooth, December 31, 2008, 01:27:53 AM

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Geetar

Ah yes: I came, I sawed, I conkered.
This space for sale.

Mikey

Quote from: "Geetar"Let me see-you must be using the special keyboard- the one with "innit" , "like wot we done" and "know wot I mean?" as single key strokes.... ;)

A hex key, also known as an Allen, zeta, or Unbrako key or wrench, is a tool of hexagonal cross-section used to drive bolts and screws that have a hexagonal socket in the head (internal-wrenching hexagon drive). The name zeta refers to the fact that zeta is the sixth letter of the Greek alphabet. The term hex-head is sometimes used to refer to this type of drive, but this use is not consistent with its more conventional use referring to external-wrenching hexagons. In the fastener industry, the terms socket head or hex socket head are generally used for the driven part of the driver-driven pair.

Some features of hex keys are:

The tool is simple, small and light.
The contact surfaces of the screw or bolt are protected from external damage.
The tool can be used with a headless screw.
The screw can be inserted into its hole using the key.
There are six contact surfaces between bolt and driver.
Torque is constrained by the length and thickness of the key.
Very small bolt heads can be accommodated.
The tool can be manufactured very cheaply, so one is often included with products requiring end-user assembly.
Either end of the tool can be used to take advantage of reach or torque.
Contents
1 History and nomenclature
2 Hex key standard sizes
3 References
4 Bibliography
5 See also
 


History and nomenclature
The first development of an internal-wrenching hexagon drive of which there are records is that of circa 1911 by the Standard Pressed Steel Company (SPS), then of Philadelphia, later of Jenkintown, Pennsylvania. (This company was the predecessor corporation to today's SPS Technologies, Inc.) SPS had sourced set screws of internal-wrenching square drive from England, but they were very expensive.[1] (This was only 3 years after P. L. Robertson first began producing his internal-wrenching square drive.) This cost problem drove SPS to purchase its first screw machine and make its screws in-house, which soon led to SPS's foray into fastener sales (for which it later became well known within the metalworking industries). H. T. Hallowell, Sr., founder of SPS, in his memoir (1951) says that "[for] a while we experimented with a screw containing a square hole like the English screw but soon found these would not be acceptable in this country [the U.S.]. Then we decided to incorporate a hexagon socket into the screw [...]."[2] Hallowell does not elaborate on why SPS found that the square hole "would not be acceptable in this country", but it seems plausible that it would have to have involved licensing Robertson's patent, which would have defeated SPS's purpose of driving down its cost for internal-wrenching screws. Whatever the initial reason for the change, the internal-wrenching hexagon drive thus appears to have been a logical evolution from the internal-wrenching square drive.

Soon after SPS had begun producing the socket head set screw, Hallowell had the idea to make a socket head cap screw (SHCS). Hallowell said, "Up to this moment none of us had ever seen a socket head cap screw, and what I am about to relate concerns what I believe was the first socket head cap screw ever made in this country [the U.S.]."[3] SPS gave their line of screws the Unbrako brand name, chosen for its echoing of the word unbreakable.

Hallowell said that acceptance of the internal-wrenching hexagon drive was slow at first (painfully slow for SPS's sales), but that it eventually caught on quite strongly.[4] This adoption occurred first in tool and die work and later in other manufacturing fields such as defense (aircraft, tanks, submarines), civilian aircraft, automobiles, bicycles, furniture, and others.

Concerning the dissemination of the screws and wrenches, Hallowell said that "the transition from a square head set screw [Hallowell refers here to the then-ubiquitous external-wrenching square drive] to a hexagon socket head hollow set screw[,] for which had to be developed special keys or wrenches for tightening or loosening the screw, was the cause of more profanity among the mechanics and machine manufacturers than any other single event that happened. [...] I am sure that the old-timers who read this book will remember this period vividly."[5] (These transitional growing pains echo those experienced many decades later with the adoption of the Torx drive).

World War II, with its unprecedented push for industrial production of every kind, is probably the event that first put most laypersons in contact with the internal-wrenching hexagon drive. As Hallowell explained, the dissemination of the wrenches somewhat lagged behind the adoption of the fasteners. Presumably this fact plus the gigantic demand induced by World War II created a partial vacuum in the market. The Allen wrench trademark of the Allen Manufacturing Company of Hartford, Connecticut was taken out in 1943, and Allen became such a successful brand of hex key that many consumers in subsequent decades have assumed that the internal-wrenching hexagon drive was invented by someone named Allen. This idea abounds in print and on the web; it sounds very plausible but is in fact inaccurate.

It appears that the internal-wrenching hexagon drive may have been independently reinvented in various countries. At the least, it was patented in various countries by various patentees, and its name varies, as detailed below.

In France, a hex key is called clef Allen.
In Germany, the Czech Republic, the Netherlands, Poland, Romania, Russia and Serbia this type of screw is known by the name Inbus, after the company that patented them in Germany in 1936, Bauer und Schaurte of Neuss, Northrhine-Westphalia, Germany (stands for Innensechskantschraube Bauer und Schaurte). (It is still known as an Inbus-key—often misspelled as Imbus-key—in parts of Europe.)
In Italy it is known as brugola (pl.brugole), named after Egidio Brugola.In Italy, mr. Brugola (1926-1958) is considered the inventor of it, since he patented it in 1926.The same year mr. Brugola has founded an eponimous company to produce and sell the product. The company, now named O.E.B., acronimous for Officine (Factory in it.) Egidio Brugola, it is still active in Lissone (near Milan).
In Sweden it is called insexnyckel (sex being the Swedish word for six).
In the other non-English-speaking parts of Europe, mainly in Denmark and Norway, it is usually known as an Unbrako key (often misspelled "Umbrako"). [6] This prevalence of SPS's Unbrako brand in Scandinavia is probably related to the strength of SPS's sales efforts there, which is not surprising given that Harald F. Gade, one of the founders of SPS and long one of its head engineers and salesmen, was from a prominent Norwegian family and had extensive social contacts in Norway.[7]
Stories circulate on the internet of an Australian surnamed Alan or Allan who may have independently reinvented the drive in the 1960s. This story may be completely apocryphal, and is not the explanation for the name Allen wrench.
In 2008, SPS Technologies, Inc. formed a joint venture with Deepak Fasteners Ltd (DFL) of India to use the Unbrako brand.
I used to have a signature

Nellie

AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHH
It's in the post!

Pedro

"Putting food on the table is more important than 7/8"

Nellie

It's in the post!

Pedro

Quote from: "Nellie"Thank you. :)
You're welcome....I hate it when they go away too.... :)
"Putting food on the table is more important than 7/8"

Nellie

Apparently, you have to look up towards a light. Don't ask me, I don't make the rules.
It's in the post!

wickedwitch

Quote from: "Nellie"Apparently, you have to look up towards a light. Don't ask me, I don't make the rules.
but i heard recently that that only works for some people... or perhaps i dreamt it...

Nellie

I haven't tried it lately, but when I was at school, people said that if you sneezed with your eyes open your eyeballs would pop out. It's really quite hard to do and I'm not sure if it is possible as we were all laughing too much. :roll:
It's in the post!

Mouse

Quote from: "Nellie"I haven't tried it lately, but when I was at school, people said that if you sneezed with your eyes open your eyeballs would pop out.

It's physically impossible to do it purposefully. I tried it.  :)  Keeping your eyes open at the point of sneezing cancels it out.
Maybe it's just me, but I don't think the human body's stupid enough to allow something like that to happen.

Nellie

Perhaps something else pops out instead. Did you check?
It's in the post!

Pedro

:shock:
Advancing years will eventually threaten to compromise some seals and gaskets but, fingers crossed, no such events have been recorded here....
"Putting food on the table is more important than 7/8"

Mouse

Quote from: "Nellie"Perhaps something else pops out instead. Did you check?

 :shock: Oh dear...

catherine

Quote from: "Pedro":shock:
Advancing years will eventually threaten to compromise some seals and gaskets but, fingers crossed, no such events have been recorded here....

I'm sure it's only a matter of time, Pedro!

Freddy

...tell me, am I in WONDERLAND now?