I have a full set of the JIS screwdrivers and they tend not to strip the heads of the screws, no question they are the right tool for a Yamaha job. Not good for Harley or BMW.
I've replaced the throttle shaft screws on two sets of carbs so far and I used a deburring tool on a Dremel to grind the ends off the screws. They are installed at the factory and then the threaded ends sticking out are whacked by a hammer, I don't know the exact process. The whacking bulges & flattens out the end of the screw so it won't come off even if it loosens.
I made a thin 1" wide barrier of epoxy putty that I pressed-fit inside the shaft and had oiled the metal first so the epoxy wouldn't stick. I pulled it out when almost completely hard & cut the ends to shape so it would fit inside the shaft as a shield so I could get at the throttle shaft screws easily and if the deburring tool jumped while I was grinding, it would hit that epoxy shield and not the metal in the shaft.
It was a good idea, the deburring bit jumped a couple of times but with zero damage. The epoxy barrier was easily moved to the other carbs.
I never ruined any of the heads of the screws and did buy new screws but I don't think I'll buy new screws the next time because yes, the new screws are new but the thread goes in the same distance either way & I used blue thread locker when re-assembling them. Besides, I'm not convinced the replacement screws are JIS but the originals are.
I've replaced the throttle shaft screws on two sets of carbs so far and I used a deburring tool on a Dremel to grind the ends off the screws. They are installed at the factory and then the threaded ends sticking out are whacked by a hammer, I don't know the exact process. The whacking bulges & flattens out the end of the screw so it won't come off even if it loosens.
I made a thin 1" wide barrier of epoxy putty that I pressed-fit inside the shaft and had oiled the metal first so the epoxy wouldn't stick. I pulled it out when almost completely hard & cut the ends to shape so it would fit inside the shaft as a shield so I could get at the throttle shaft screws easily and if the deburring tool jumped while I was grinding, it would hit that epoxy shield and not the metal in the shaft.
It was a good idea, the deburring bit jumped a couple of times but with zero damage. The epoxy barrier was easily moved to the other carbs.
I never ruined any of the heads of the screws and did buy new screws but I don't think I'll buy new screws the next time because yes, the new screws are new but the thread goes in the same distance either way & I used blue thread locker when re-assembling them. Besides, I'm not convinced the replacement screws are JIS but the originals are.
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