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Now the trick is to try and find a screw THAT USES that size torx feature... Been searching all day for ya Max! Nada so far.
Why does it have to be a nut driver, and not just a notched piece of brass stock used as a wrench?
Narrowminded... I get what you are trying to have me make - a hex-shaped ram to press into a tube to cut/shape/form thehexagonal inner faces, the trick being that the ram is from hardened tool steel and the tube is softer (brass or something similar).
I've seen some "normal" size socket wrenches made that way. Probably inexpensive ones. I've seen the curled up pieces of metal inside them.
However.... a simple plastic nut driver (just heat the bolt and press the end of a styrene rod over it)would probably make a good enough driver to spin the bolt in most of the way, and then a wrench could be used to tighten it.That would be at least a help.
If epoxy was felt to be adequate you could drill a hole in the end of a piece of round that fit the corners, fill it with epoxy and then insert a vaseline treated bolt in it, casting it in place. One of the metal filled epoxies might be better in compression than plain epoxy. After normal cure a bake in the oven at about 200 degrees for a couple of hours can assure a through cure, as good as it gets. More is available online about post heating epoxies but improvements in the range of 20% sticks in my mind as normal. Even though many or even most don't require that in the instructions, most or if my memory serves me right, even all, will benefit from that. And I guess there's nothing to stop you from mixing some metal filings of your own in otherwise standard epoxy. Make sure it's clean material that you file up.
If epoxy was felt to be adequate you could drill a hole in the end of a piece of round that fit the corners, fill it with epoxy and then insert a vaseline treated bolt in it, casting it in place. O