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| Later, when the Original Wave came out, it used the same "offset" principle. |
Leatherman Wave, original model |
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| The next generation of Gerber Multi-Pliers (the 600 series and 400 series) addressed these concerns somewhat, giving the phillips a slightly longer reach. |
Gerber Multi-Plier 600 |
After that from Gerber came the Diesel, and on it we see a flattened phillips driver. This allows more blades to fit in the handle, but the design does not seem to grip screws as well. |
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Gerber Diesel |
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| Most recently, it seems as if Gerber engineers have taken a step backward. The new Flik tool has a flattened phillips driver like the Diesel, and the length has been reduced to an almost ridiculous stubbiness. |
Gerber Flik |
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| At about the same time Leatherman introduced a new generation of dedicated drivers on some of its multitools, like the one (shown at left) on the Kick. It has a good reach, a #2 head that fits into screws properly, a textured finish, and is properly offset. |
Leatherman Kick |
A similar dedicated phillips is on the Core, except that this one is longer still. |
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Leatherman Core |
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| Shown at left is a length comparison shot, with Kick on the left and Core on the right. |
Leatherman Kick -vs- Core |
The BuckTool 360 originally came out with a short, three-toothed phillips that was flat on the back side. |
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BuckTool 360, early version |
Backside of an early BuckTool phillips at right. Apparently this design allowed them to squeeze more blades in. |
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BuckTool 360, early version, back side |
Phillips drivers on Bear Jaws tools are massive, solid cast affairs that take up a considerable amount of thickness in the handle. This leaves less space for additional blades. |
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Bear Jaws 155 |
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| Schrade Cutlery's ST1 phillips screwdriver is somewhat flattened, with two full teeth and two shallow teeth. It has decent length to it, and gripping ridges like we saw on the BuckTool. |
Schrade ST1 Tough Tool |
The phillips driver that Kershaw included on their A100 Multi-Tool is reminiscent of the early Leatherman or current SOG style, with its full #1 head and reduced width shank. The offset direction is correct though, which is important in a non-locking multitool. |
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Kershaw A100 Multi-Tool |