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Couldn't you make something similar to those universal sockets. Take your oversized tubing about an inch long, place it over the bolt head, fill the tube with small diameter brass rods. Some of which will go down beside the head and some will sit on top of the head. Now flood the top of the tube with solder to hold all the rods in place. Custom made socket.
Take a brass tube and put your nuts in it then convince the tube to be be a hex tube with this .http://g01.a.alicdn.com/kf/HTB1M7ZsIFXXXXXvXpXXq6xXFXXXy/Coaxial-font-b-crimper-b-font-crimping-Tool-LS-02H1-for-coaxial-cable-BNC-fiber-optic.jpg
There's a 1.72mm crimp size on that thing, I see.1.72 - 1.1 = .62mm = .024"Hmmm.... Not quite .014" wall thickness of the standard K&S tubing, but it might fly.
For long term use....In order to reduce the chance the thinner brass will flare, I wonder if you could flare the tip of next size tube and slide it over your new nut driver. This would give you a thicker wall.
I did think about this (reenforcing my nut driver with another layer of tube around the outside wall).I wonder.... is that how it will really give, or will the straight faces on the inside just kind of round off over time?
I think sometimes we overplay wear on these tiny devices that do not see grease monkey torques or real life loads.
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