Features
- Powerful Functions: This precision screwdriver set contains 101 precision bits and 21 auxiliary tools—screwdriver handle, flexible shaft, extension rod, magnetizer, magnetic mat, spudgers, and more. It handles PC maintenance—RAM upgrades, SSD swaps, PC assembly—while also tackling teardowns and repairs of PS4, Xbox, other game consoles, drones, smartphones, tablets (battery and screen replacements), and other electronics. Rare and specialty bits are included for servicing specialized devices.
- Maximize Repair Efficiency: Engineered for efficient repairs, the handle is ergonomically designed and non-slip, fitting comfortably in your hand and spinning smoothly. A 4.56-inch alloy-steel extension shaft offers high hardness and resists bending, while the spring-constructed flexible shaft flexes up to 180° to reach and turn tiny screws deep inside a chassis with ease.
- Dual-Magnet Design: The kit includes two magnetic tools. A magnetizer boosts bit magnetism to pick up screws, and a magnetic mat holds and organizes every tiny screw you remove. Used together, they slash the risk of loss or mix-ups, keeping every teardown and reassembly neat and orderly.
- Quality First: The bits are forged from Cr-V steel and heat-treated to 60 HRC for exceptional hardness, strength, and deformation resistance—ideal for long-term electronic repairs. Spare bits in the most common sizes are also included, so a lost tip never leaves you short, keeping the kit fully functional and extending its service life.
- Compact Storage: Every component is neatly labeled and organized in the case—ready for home, office, or on-the-go use. This all-in-one kit saves money and eliminates service appointments. It’s the perfect household essential and an ideal gift for husbands, dads, sons, or friends who love electronics repair and DIY projects.
Specifications
Color | Grey |
Size | Small |
Unit Count | 126 |
Related Tools
This precision screwdriver kit contains 101 magnetic bits and 21 auxiliary tools—including an ergonomic handle, a 4.56-inch alloy-steel extension rod, a flexible shaft that bends up to 180°, magnetizer, magnetic mat, and spudgers—neatly organized in a compact labeled case. The Cr-V steel bits are heat-treated to about 60 HRC and the kit is intended for electronics repair and maintenance tasks such as laptop and tablet screen/battery replacement, smartphone and console teardown, drone servicing, and PC assembly, with spare common bits included.
SHOWPIN 122 in 1 Precision Computer Screwdriver Kit, Laptop Screwdriver Sets with 101 Magnetic Drill Bits, Computer Accessories, Electronics Tool Kit Compatible for Tablet, PC, iPhone, PS4 Repair Review
Why this compact kit earned a spot on my bench
I spend a lot of time opening small things that weren’t meant to be opened—laptops, game controllers, phones, handheld consoles, and increasingly compact PCs. The SHOWPIN precision screwdriver kit has been riding along for a few months, and it’s become the set I grab first for electronics and light mechanical work. It’s not flashy, but it covers the right fasteners, reaches awkward screws, and keeps the chaos in check with thoughtful organization.
What’s in the box and how it’s built
At the heart of the kit are 101 magnetic bits forged from Cr-V steel, heat-treated to about 60 HRC. In practice, that means they’re hard enough to resist rounding on tiny fasteners without being so brittle that they chip. The selection is broad and genuinely useful: the usual Phillips and slotted sizes for laptops, Torx and Torx Security for consoles and PC gear, pentalobes for phones, and other specialty profiles for oddball consumer electronics. SHOWPIN also includes spares for a few of the most-used sizes, which is a considerate touch—losing a PH000 shouldn’t sideline the whole kit.
The driver handle is compact, grippy, and spins cleanly between finger and thumb for controlled, low-torque work. Two reach helpers are included: a 4.56-inch alloy-steel extension rod for straight-line access, and a flexible shaft that bends up to 180° for screws buried behind obstructive panels or under power supplies. The flexibility is genuinely useful as long as you respect its torque limits.
Two magnetic helpers pull a lot of weight: a magnetizer/demagnetizer block to tune the bit’s magnetism, and a small magnetic mat to stage tiny screws during teardown. Together they turn a flurry of M2/M2.5 screws into an orderly reassembly.
Everything lives in a compact, labeled case. The footprint is small enough for a backpack pocket, and the trays hold bits snugly without being a fingernail fight.
Performance on real repairs
Laptop maintenance: I used the kit to swap RAM and an SSD in a thin-and-light, then later to replace a cracked display panel. The PH00/000 bits fit snugly with no cam-out, and the driver’s top spinner made quick work of long screw runs. The extension rod was perfect for the deeper standoffs along the hinge rail.
Console and controller work: The Torx and Torx Security bits matched fasteners cleanly, and the smaller sizes didn’t show rounding after multiple sessions. The included spudgers were stiff enough to separate snap-fit plastics without marking them, as long as I worked slowly and kept the angle shallow.
Small-form-factor PC assembly: The flexible shaft proved its worth routing around a tight 92 mm cooler to reach a bracket screw. It’s easy to over-twist a flexible shaft; I learned to “set” the screw by hand, then finish with short, controlled turns to avoid springy backlash.
Drone and handheld gadgets: Specialty bits like tri-point and pentalobe covered the odd screws without a run to the shop. The magnetizer was essential here—once energized, the bit held micro-screws securely without dropping them into housing cavities.
Across those tasks, fit and finish were consistent. Bits seated fully, the handle didn’t slip, and the magnetic coupling was adequate for most electronics screws. On a couple of stubborn, thread-locked fasteners, I grabbed a larger driver with a broader handle for more torque—this kit is optimized for precision, not brute force, and that’s the right call for its mission.
Durability over time
Cr-V bits at 60 HRC are a good middle ground for electronics: durable, not brittle. After dozens of screws in steel standoffs and threaded inserts, the tiny Phillips tips still have crisp edges. The Torx sizes, which often suffer first in cheaper sets, haven’t deformed. I’ve been careful to avoid cheater bars or heavy torque on the flexible shaft, and I’d recommend the same. If you frequently break threadlocker or handle stuck screws, pair this kit with a separate full-size driver or a small impact driver with appropriate adapters; that division of labor keeps the precision bits in good shape.
The extension rod is straight and stays put without wobble. The flexible shaft has a bit of torsional spring, as expected; treat it as an access tool, not a torque multiplier.
Ergonomics and organization
The handle’s proportions are well-judged for electronics: a grippy body, a smooth-spinning end cap, and just enough girth to apply controlled force without fatiguing your fingers. The knurling and texture provide traction even if your hands pick up a bit of flux or oil.
The case is compact and clearly labeled. One quirk: you access one side of the bit tray at a time. It’s not a dealbreaker, but it does mean you’ll flip the case mid-job if you’re pulling from across the range. On the positive side, the latches are secure and the hinges feel sturdier than most budget kits; bits stay put even after a jostle in a backpack.
The magnetic mat is small but mighty. I jot quick notes with a dry-erase marker—“top-left,” “hinge,” “shield screws”—and the mat keeps clusters organized so reassembly isn’t a guessing game. I also like the ability to demagnetize bits before working near sensors or compasses; it’s a small touch that prevents annoyance later.
Coverage and limitations
What it covers well:
- Electronics fasteners from phones to laptops to consoles
- Specialty screws you’ll encounter in handhelds and accessories
- Tight, awkward reaches inside small PC builds
Where it’s not ideal:
- High-torque or corroded fasteners
- Large furniture screws or automotive work
- Situations where a ratcheting driver speeds repetitive tasks
A small note on counts: my set included 101 bits plus 21 auxiliary tools, which aligns with the piece count called out in the packaging. The presence of spare common bits is a plus, but if you’re cataloging every last piece, expect slight variations depending on how the manufacturer bundles backups.
Practical tips for better results
Magnetize before you start. A quick pass through the magnetizer saves a lot of dropped screws. Demagnetize when you’re done if you’ll store the kit near sensitive instruments.
Start tiny screws by hand. Use fingers to set the first few threads, especially when working with plastics, then switch to the driver.
Let the bit do the locating. Press lightly, rotate slowly until you feel the bit drop into the fastener’s profile, then apply torque. This preserves both bit and screw.
Use the flexible shaft for access, not force. If a screw resists, switch back to the rigid extension or full-size driver.
Keep the mat annotated. A few quick notes on the magnetic mat cut reassembly time in half.
Value
This is a lot of functional coverage in a compact, affordable kit. The bit quality is better than I’d expect at this price, the handle is comfortable, and the magnetic helpers meaningfully reduce lost-part frustration. You could spend more for a ratcheting handle, premium picks, or an expanded pry toolkit, but for general electronics maintenance, this hits a sweet spot.
Pros and cons
Pros:
- Broad, well-chosen bit selection with useful specialty profiles
- Hardened Cr-V bits hold up under typical electronics use
- Comfortable driver with smooth-spinning cap
- Flexible shaft and rigid extension cover most reach scenarios
- Magnetizer and magnetic mat significantly improve workflow
- Compact, labeled case; spare common bits included
Cons:
- Case design requires flipping to access the opposite tray
- Flexible shaft isn’t suited to higher torque (as expected)
- No ratcheting driver; high-volume repetitive work could be faster
- Magnetic pull at the tip is moderate without using the magnetizer
Recommendation
I recommend the SHOWPIN kit for anyone who regularly opens electronics—IT techs, repair-curious hobbyists, console modders, and PC builders working in tight spaces. It balances breadth of bit coverage, real usability, and organization better than most budget sets. The magnetic accessories and reach options noticeably improve repair flow, and the bit quality is up to repeated use if you respect the torque limits. It’s not a one-kit solution for every shop task, but for precision electronics work, it’s exactly the tool roll I want within arm’s reach.
Project Ideas
Business
Mobile Device Repair Service
Offer on-site phone, tablet and laptop screen/battery replacements using the kit. The full set of bits, flexible shaft and magnetic mat lets you handle most device types quickly and accurately. Market fast, convenient repairs and upsell protective films, cases and refurbished parts.
Refurbish & Resell Electronics
Buy broken laptops/consoles, repair them (SSDs, RAM, screens, controllers) and resell as certified refurbished units. The Cr-V bits, spare tips and compact case reduce downtime and tool loss; document repairs with before/after photos to justify margins and build trust.
Repair Workshops & Classes
Host community classes teaching basic electronics maintenance—battery swaps, SSD installs, console cleaning—using the kit as the standard student toolset. Charge per attendee and sell individual kits or curated starter packs at the class for extra revenue.
Subscription Tool Rental & On-Demand Tech Support
Create a local subscription where customers rent the kit for DIY repairs or schedule a technician to come using your kit. Include video guidance and troubleshooting checklists. Renting tools plus optional labor creates recurring revenue and lowers barriers to DIY.
Content & Affiliate Niche: Repair Tutorials
Produce step-by-step repair videos, guides and downloadable checklists focused on common fixes (phone screens, PS4 maintenance, drone servicing). Monetize via ads, Patreon, and affiliate links to exact kits and parts. Highlight features (magnetizer, labeled case, rare bits) to drive kit sales through your links.
Creative
Steampunk Screw & Circuit Wall Clock
Use salvaged PCBs, gears, screws and tiny bits from the kit to build a wall clock. The magnetic mat helps organize small parts while the precision bits and spudgers remove components cleanly; use the flexible shaft to access recessed mounting points. Finish with a weathered brass patina for a functional steampunk accent piece.
Micro-Sculpture Assemblies
Create miniature sculptures or diorama pieces by combining tiny screws, springs and standoffs removed from old electronics. The variety of specialty bits makes painless teardown and extraction, and the magnetizer keeps small metal parts easy to place. Mount creations on a labeled-case display or in resin paperweights.
Custom Mechanical-Keycap & Switch Repair Kits
Design decorative keycap sets and repair/modify mechanical switches salvaged from keyboards. Use the precision driver bits for switch disassembly and the extension/flexible shafts for awkward angles. Offer finished artisan keycaps mounted with cleaned switch parts as collectible desk art.
Circuit-Board Coasters & Jewelry
Turn nonfunctional smartphone and laptop PCBs into coasters, necklaces and cufflinks. The kit’s spudgers and specialty bits allow safe board removal; clean and seal boards under resin. Use the magnetic mat to arrange small screw and component inlays before casting for unique tech-themed gifts.
Miniature LED Model Lighting
Retrofit scale models (railroad, architectural, RC) with micro-LEDs harvested from old devices. Use the precision kit to open housings, remove LEDs, and drill tiny mounting holes with steady control using the ergonomic handle and extension rod. Hide wiring professionally for museum-quality displays.