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Heat the thing up and quench it in oil. I think sometimes we overplay wear on these tiny devices that do not see grease monkey torques or real life loads. It sounded like it was so easy to make you could make a lifetime's supply anyhow.I do think however, had you heated the brass in advance, it would not have shaved material into the tube as the picture shows.
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?
John, true if I had annealed it beforehand, it would have been "softer" and formed with shaving, although I'm not too worried about the shaving. But if I heat and quench it now, it's not going to harden is it? Brass doesn't harden from doing that the way steel does.
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
Max, you have perfect little socket wrench. I would leave it alone for now. If it wears out, you can easily make another one (since you now know how and you know how easy it it to make). How many times will you use it on your model? Do you think enough to cause it to wear out?