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70-in-1 Cordless Screwdriver Review: Right for Us?

Ever tried tuning a cabinet hinge in a cramped corner, tightening a loose jig stop, or swapping a battery in a digital caliper—only to fumble wiht the wrong bit and risk stripping a tiny screw? In a woodworking shop, precision isn’t just for joinery; it’s for all the small hardware and tool maintenance that keeps projects running smoothly.
That’s where this 70-in-1 Cordless Electric Screwdriver Set aims to fit in. It’s a compact 3.7V USB‑C rechargeable mini driver paired with 64 bits (listed as S2 steel in the title) plus a few small accessories, built for delicate, high-accuracy fastening. With 5 torque settings and 4 LED lights, it’s designed to give better control and visibility than a full-size drill in tight spaces.
In this review, we’ll break down the feature set, organization and portability, ease of use for beginners, and whether the build quality and value align with real shop needs. Many customer reviews highlight the adjustable torque, strong magnetic case retention, solid feel, and battery that holds a charge—useful signals for woodworkers balancing budget with dependable gear. Our perspective comes from years of keeping tools, jigs, and hardware dialed in where small errors add up fast.
Tool Overview and Build quality on the Bench

On our bench, this 70-in-1 cordless electric screwdriver reads more like a precision shop helper than a “construction” driver—and that’s exactly how we’d frame it for woodworking. The motor is rated at 200 RPM,powered by a 3.7V rechargeable battery with USB‑C charging (the listing calls out about 1.5 hours for a full charge), and it includes 4 LED lights aimed right at the bit—handy when we’re leaning into a cabinet corner or trying to see a tiny screw head under a clamp. In the hand it’s clearly meant for controlled fastening, not brute force: the tool offers 5 torque settings (the product copy mentions 0.25 Nm / 0.35 Nm low-torque control plus a manual mode up to 5 Nm), which matters in the woodshop when we’re installing hinges, adjusting hardware, or snugging tiny screws into pre-drilled hardwood without stripping heads or snapping shafts. Customer review themes line up with that use case—people repeatedly call it “very portable,” “solid build quality,” and “perfect for delicate items,” and several mention it saves time compared to turning a micro driver by hand.
Build-quality-wise, the kit’s real “bench value” is the storage and organization as much as the driver. Multiple reviewers highlight the magnetic case that securely holds the tips—one even notes you can invert the case and the bits don’t spill—so we’re not chasing micro bits across the floor like dropped brads. the bits included are advertised as 64 S2 steel bits (some listing text also calls them CRV; we’d treat the exact alloy claim as marketing noise and focus on whether they fit cleanly and resist cam‑out), and the set is designed around small fasteners common in electronics—but that crosses over to woodworking when we’re dealing with battery compartments on tools, digital calipers, laser measures, router accessories, or small hardware packs. For technique, we’d use the torque dial like a “clutch on training wheels”: start low, finish by hand if needed, and always pre-seat the bit fully to avoid chewing up tiny screw heads—especially in harder species where resistance rises fast. One international reviewer puts it plainly: it’s a strong advice for fine work, but “for furniture etc. choose a bigger one”—and we agree; this is a precision driver for the shop, not a substitute for a full-size drill/driver when we’re hanging doors or driving long screws.
- Included accessories: Cordless screwdriver, 64 precision bits, magnetic case, USB‑C cable, precision tweezers, pry bar, screw gauge, suction pad, hanging ring, silicone pad
- Compatible attachments/accessories (shop-kind ideas): Standard precision bits that match the included holder, spare micro bit sets (Torx/pentalobe/Phillips), magnetic parts tray, small manual driver for final hand-snugging
- Ideal project types: Hinge/handle tweaks, jig and fence adjustments, installing small drawer-slide screws, tool maintenance (battery doors, guards), assembling knock-down jigs, shop electronics and measuring-tool repairs
- Wood types tested by customers: Not specified in reviews (most feedback centers on electronics/RC/household use)
| spec | What the listing says | What it means on a woodworking bench |
|---|---|---|
| Speed | 200 RPM | Slow enough for control on small screws; not meant for high-volume driving |
| battery / Charging | 3.7V, USB‑C, ~1.5 hr charge (claimed) | Convenient top-off in the shop; easy to keep in a drawer and charge as needed |
| Torque control | 5 settings (copy mentions 0.25/0.35 Nm + manual) | Helps avoid stripping small screws in hardware and shop accessories |
| Lighting | 4 LED lights | Useful for inside cabinets, under benches, and tight assemblies |
| Bits | 64 precision bits (advertised as S2 steel) | broad coverage for micro fasteners; doubles as a “shop gadget” toolkit |
| bit/Accessory Type | Included | woodshop use-case |
|---|---|---|
| Precision bits (assorted) | Yes (64) | Small hardware screws, tool/electronics access panels, measuring-device maintenance |
| Tweezers / Pry tool / Suction cup | Yes | handling tiny screws, lifting battery covers, opening small housings |
| Magnetic case | Yes | Keeps bits organized; reduces “lost bit” time during setup and cleanup |
| USB‑C cable | Yes | Easy charging from common shop chargers/power strips |
| Task Type | Recommended capacity | Actual Capacity (what this tool is best at) |
|---|---|---|
| Micro screws (hardware, gadgets, shop tools) | High | Strong fit (torque settings + 200 RPM + LEDs) |
| Typical cabinetry screws (longer/coarser) | Medium | Use sparingly; switch to a drill/driver to avoid strain and slowdowns |
| Furniture assembly structural fasteners | Low | Not the right class of tool—reviewers also suggest sizing up for furniture |
See Full Specifications & Customer Photos
real world Performance for Hardware Installation and Light Wood Joinery Tasks

In our shop, this 3.7V USB‑C rechargeable mini driver feels most at home when we’re doing hardware installation that involves small fasteners—think hinge adjustments on jewelry boxes, battery-compartment screws on shop lasers/measuring tools, or the fiddly screws on jigs and accessories—rather than driving wood screws into hardwood.The 200 RPM motor speed is quick enough to make repetitive threading less tedious, and the 4 LED lights do legitimately help when we’re reaching inside cabinets or working under a bench where shadows hide screw heads.Customer review themes line up with what we’d expect for this class: people repeatedly call it “very portable and easy to use”,praise the “solid build quality”,and mention the USB‑C charging and battery that “holds [its] charge well”—all of which matters when we want a grab‑and‑go tool that lives in a drawer,not a full-size drill that needs a dedicated spot.
For light wood joinery tasks, we see this as a precision assistant, not the main muscle. The big advantage is control: the set’s 5 torque settings (and the product description’s emphasis on low torque like 0.25–0.35 Nm for delicate work) can help us avoid crushing fibers or snapping tiny screws when we’re assembling thin stock, installing small brass hinges, or tightening hardware on softwoods where over-driving is easy. Reviewers also emphasize the adjustable torque as “nice to have for working on delicate items,” and several mention it “saves time and energy” on small fasteners. That said, we should be realistic: when we move into typical woodworking territory—like #8 screws into oak/maple, pocket-hole screws, or structural cabinet hardware—we’d still pre-drill and reach for a full-size drill/driver. A practical technique is to use this tool to run screws down close to seated, then finish by hand (or at the lowest setting) to protect screw heads and reduce cam-out; the included 64 S2 steel bits plus the commonly praised magnetic case that securely holds tips helps us stay organized and match the correct bit—an underappreciated skill that directly improves accuracy and prevents stripped fasteners.
See Full Specifications & Customer Photos
key Features Woodworkers Will appreciate for Shop Fixes and Precision Assembly

In a woodworking shop, a micro-driver like this earns its keep in the “little fixes” that clog up a build day—tightening a loose fence scale cover, swapping batteries in a digital caliper, adjusting a hinge-stop screw on a small cabinet door, or re-securing a laser level bracket.The big woodworker-friendly win is control: the screwdriver runs on 3.7V power with 5 torque settings (the product listing also references 0.25Nm/0.35Nm low-torque options) and a 200 RPM motor, so we can drive tiny fasteners without the “one slip and the head is toast” problem.That matches what customers keep highlighting—“adjustable torque,” “works grate,” “saves time and energy,” and “perfect for small projects/delicate items”—which is exactly the lane we’d put it in for woodworking: precision assembly and shop-tool maintenance, not big hardware. The built-in 4 LED lights are also more practical than they sound; when we’re leaning into a shadowy cabinet corner or peering under a benchtop to snug a small screw, light at the bit helps us stay centered and avoid cam-out.
- Included accessories: 1 electric screwdriver, 64 S2 steel bits (product title), magnetic case, USB-C cable, tweezers, pry bar, screw gauge, suction cup, hanging ring, silicone pad
Organization is another feature woodworkers actually feel day-to-day. The kit’s magnetic case with magnetic bit retention shows up repeatedly in review themes—people mention the bits “don’t all fall out,” the “magnetic case works great,” and that it’s portable and easy to use. In our shop context, that means fewer lost micro-bits in sawdust and fewer interruptions when we’re mid-assembly. Educationally, we’ll get the best results by treating this like a powered precision screwdriver: start on the lowest torque, keep the bit fully seated, and let the clutch stop before the screw head bottoms out—especially in softer woods where stripping happens fast. When we do need more muscle (like a sticky screw in a tool’s plastic housing or a stubborn machine screw),the listing notes a manual mode up to 5Nm; that’s a useful reminder that motor torque and hand torque are different tools,and it’s often safer to “break” a fastener loose by hand before spinning it out under power.
- Compatible attachments/accessories: precision 1/4″ hex micro-bits (kit bits), replacement micro-bits (same shank style), USB-C charging cables/power banks
- Ideal project types: hardware alignment on small boxes, hinge and latch adjustments, jig/fence accessory tightening, installing small brass screws, tool/electronic accessory maintenance (calipers, laser levels)
- Wood types tested by customers: Not specified in reviews (most feedback centers on electronics/RC/household use)
| Spec / Feature | What It Is (This Kit) | Why We Care in the Woodshop |
|---|---|---|
| Voltage | 3.7V | Signals “precision driver” territory—great for small screws, not framing or cabinet install hardware. |
| Speed | 200 RPM (listing) | Fast enough to reduce hand fatigue when running lots of small fasteners during precision assembly. |
| Torque control | 5 torque settings (listing also references 0.25/0.35 Nm options) | Helps prevent stripping tiny screws or crushing hardware into softer woods. |
| Lighting | 4 LED lights | Better bit alignment in cabinets, under benches, and around machines where shadows hide the screw head. |
| Charging | USB-C rechargeable (listing notes ~1.5 hr charge time) | Easy to top off from a power bank or shop USB outlet; reviewers specifically praise USB-C charging and battery holding charge. |
| Bit / Accessory Type | Included? | Woodworking-Relevant Use |
|---|---|---|
| 64 precision bits (S2 steel) | Yes | Best for small hardware, adjustment screws, and compact assemblies where full-size drivers feel clumsy. |
| Magnetic case | Yes | Keeps micro-bits corralled—customers repeatedly praise the magnetic retention. |
| Tweezers / pry bar / suction cup | Yes | More “repair kit” than “carpentry,” but handy for handling tiny screws, battery doors, and delicate parts. |
| USB-C cable | Yes | Convenient charging; reviewers note it’s easy to charge and the battery holds charge well. |
| task Capacity | Recommended (Woodshop Reality) | What This Driver Is Better For |
|---|---|---|
| Driving large wood screws | Not recommended | Use an impact/driver drill for #8–#10+ screws or long fasteners. |
| Driving small brass/steel screws | Recommended | 5 torque settings + 200 RPM helps avoid stripping and wrist fatigue. |
| Tool/electronic accessory maintenance | Highly recommended | Aligning, tightening, and servicing small components; reviews repeatedly cite electronics and “small screws” success. |
see Full Specifications & Customer Photos
Ease of Use for Beginners and pros Along with Workshop Storage and Value

For both beginners and seasoned shop hands,this mini driver set is a “pick it up and go” kind of tool: the 3.7V USB-C rechargeable handle, 5 torque settings, and 4 LED lights make it approachable when we’re working in a shadowy cabinet or doing delicate hardware where a full-size drill/driver feels like overkill. In practical woodworking terms, it’s most at home on small fasteners—think hinge adjustments, battery compartments on laser measures, tightening loose screws on jigs, or assembling shop accessories—rather than driving big wood screws into hardwood. Reviewers repeatedly echo that it “works great,” “is very portable and easy to use,” and that the adjustable torque is handy for delicate items; one even notes that once you “figure how to use it,” it’s a straightforward helper. The spec sheet claims ~200 RPM and highlights torque protection (with low torque values for electronics plus a manual mode), which matches how we’d teach using it in the shop: start on the lowest torque setting, keep the bit fully seated, and let the clutch stop before the screw head cam-outs—especially vital on small brass screws in hinges where stripping is easy.
Storage and overall value are where this kit earns its keep in a woodworking space. The magnetic pop-up case is a real workshop-friendly feature as it keeps the 64 S2/S2-class steel bits (the listing also mentions high-hardness alloy bits) from turning into “lost-in-the-shavings” extras; customers specifically praise the magnetic case that securely holds all individual tips and that the bits don’t fall out.That organization also helps us work cleaner: fewer loose micro-bits rolling onto the floor means less risk of a bit ending up under a workpiece and denting softer woods.Multiple reviewers call it good value for money and highlight battery life that holds a charge plus the convenience of USB-C charging—including the nice touch that some mention: you can charge it while it’s in the protective case. As a “small-screw specialist” that stores neatly and stays ready, it can be a smart add-on next to our full-size drivers, especially if our workflow includes hardware installs, jig tuning, and frequent tool maintenance.
- Included accessories
- 1× cordless electric screwdriver (3.7V)
- 64× precision bits (S2/S2-class steel per title)
- 1× magnetic case
- 1× USB-C cable
- 1× precision tweezers
- 1× pry bar
- 1× screw gauge
- 1× suction pad
- 1× hanging ring/pin
- 1× silicone pad
- Compatible attachments/accessories
- 1/4-in micro-bit style tips included in the kit (64 pcs)
- Common small-driver bit profiles used in hardware/electronics (e.g., Phillips, Torx, pentalobe—varies by kit)
- USB-C charging from a standard USB power source
- Ideal project types
- Cabinet hinge and pull/knob adjustments (small machine screws)
- Assembly and tuning of jigs, fences, and measuring tools
- Installing/servicing battery-powered shop accessories
- Light-duty shop fixes where over-torque would strip small screws
- Wood types tested by customers
- not specified in reviews (most feedback centers on electronics/precision screws)
| Spec / Feature | What It Means in Our Shop |
|---|---|
| Voltage: 3.7V (cordless) | Best for small fasteners and light-duty adjustments, not heavy screw-driving in hardwood. |
| Speed: ~200 RPM (claimed) | Fast enough to save time on lots of small screws during setup/maintenance. |
| Torque settings: 5 settings | Helps avoid stripping small heads; start low when working with brass or tiny hardware. |
| Lighting: 4 LEDs | Better visibility inside cabinets/drawers and under benches. |
| Bits included: 64 pcs (S2/S2-class steel per title) | Wide coverage means less hunting for the right tip—reviewers call the variety “staggering.” |
| Charging: USB-C rechargeable | Convenient charging from common cords/power banks; reviewers mention easy charging and good charge retention. |
| Case: magnetic pop-up/retention | Keeps micro-bits organized; customers praise strong magnet retention and secure storage. |
| Accessory Category | Included | Workshop Use |
|---|---|---|
| Precision bits | Yes (64) | Match tiny screw heads on hardware, tools, and shop gadgets. |
| Tweezers / pry tools | Yes | Handy for retrieving small screws/parts without dropping them into dust. |
| Screw gauge | Yes | Helps identify small screw sizing when replacing missing hardware. |
| USB-C cable | Yes | Easy charging in the shop or truck without a proprietary charger. |
| Magnetic storage case | Yes | Prevents bit loss; reviewers highlight that bits don’t spill out. |
| Task Capacity | Recommended Use (Woodshop) | Not Ideal For |
|---|---|---|
| Small screws | Excellent: hinge screws, jig adjustments, tool/electronics maintenance | N/A |
| Medium wood screws | Occasional/light duty (pilot holes advised) | Repeated driving into hardwood without pilot holes |
| large/deck screws | Use a full-size drill/impact driver instead | Structural fastening and high-torque applications |
See Full Specifications & Customer Photos
Customer Reviews Analysis

What Woodworkers Are Saying (Based on Review Themes)
| Aspect | Common Feedback |
|---|---|
| Overall Sentiment | Strongly positive for small-screw tasks; viewed as a time-saver and good value. |
| Performance | Praised for “plenty of power” for its size, consistent driving on small fasteners, useful torque settings. |
| Build Quality | Multiple reviews highlight solid construction, a well-designed case, and magnetic bit retention. |
| Ease of Use | Generally easy/portable; torque adjustment takes a little practice for delicate work. |
| Project Fit | Best for fine hardware, jigs, and small-shop fixes; less suited to furniture/deck-scale fastening. |
| Limitations | Not a “big” driver—some users explicitly recommend sizing up for furniture or heavier tasks. |
1. Overall sentiment from woodworking customers
Several woodworkers mentioned this kit as a surprisingly useful shop companion—especially for the kinds of small fasteners that pop up in woodworking (hardware installs, tool maintenance, and quick repairs). Common praise includes saving “time and energy,” strong value, and a well-organized bit assortment that reduces fumbling around for the right driver.
2. Performance feedback (accuracy, power, results)
Multiple reviews highlight that it has good torque for a mini driver and holds charge well. woodworkers who value control on small screws liked the adjustable torque settings for avoiding stripped heads—one reviewer noted that “once you get the hang of adjusting the torque,” it helps prevent damage on delicate fasteners. The integrated LED lights were repeatedly called out as helpful for accuracy when lining up tiny screws in low-light or tight spaces (think hinge cups, drawer hardware corners, or inside tool housings).
3. Build quality and durability observations
Common praise includes a “solid build quality” and that it feels “well constructed and engineered.” Reviewers also appreciated the case design: magnetic bit holding (so bits “don’t all fall out”) and a latch that “locks with a click.” A durability-adjacent plus for shop use: several users liked that it can be charged while stored in the case, which reduces the odds of losing parts or leaving the tool on a bench to get knocked around.
4. Ease of use for different skill levels
Beginners and DIY-minded users described it as easy to use and portable, with the bit selection making it simpler to match the screw type quickly (less trial-and-error than a bin of loose micro screwdrivers). Some users reported challenges with the learning curve on torque adjustment—not a deal-breaker, but it’s something you dial in with a bit of practice if you’re working with soft metals or tiny screws.
5. Common project types and success stories
While many reviews centered on electronics, woodworking-adjacent use cases still show up in the feedback:
- Customers successfully used this for general home repair and “Heimwerken” (DIY work).
- Several reviewers mentioned using it across hobbies including models and RC cars, which maps well to woodworking shops that also do jig-building, template fixtures, or small mechanical assemblies.
- One reviewer explicitly listed woodworking among the “use it on everything” range (alongside clocks, watches, and appliances), suggesting it shines as a detail driver for small screws rather than a primary shop drill/driver.
6. Issues or limitations reported
Some users reported challenges with scope/scale: it’s ideal for fine, filigree work but not intended for heavier fastening. One reviewer specifically advised that “for work on furniture etc. I would choose a number bigger,” which aligns with what most woodworkers would expect from a 3.7V mini driver—great for small hardware and maintenance, not for driving long screws into hardwood or assembling large furniture frames. No consistent complaints surfaced in the provided reviews beyond that “right tool for the job” limitation.
Pros & Cons

Pros & Cons
With this 70-in-1 cordless screwdriver, we felt like we’d upgraded from “loose bits in a drawer” to “tiny repair crew in a box.” It’s clearly built for micro-jobs—phones, laptops, RC electronics, glasses—where the screws are small, the plastic is fragile, and our patience is even smaller.
Pros
- Compact, “grab-and-go” design: The mini driver + case combo fits our electronics workflow better than a bulky drill ever could.
- USB-C rechargeable convenience: We like not hunting for a proprietary charger; topping it up feels as simple as charging a phone.
- 5 torque settings for delicate work: Having adjustable torque helps us avoid the classic disaster: stripping tiny screws or cracking plastic.
- 64 bits + extra tools = real versatility: Between the bit variety and accessories (like tweezers/pry tools), we can cover a lot of common gadget tasks without improvising.
- magnetic case retention is genuinely useful: Bits staying put makes the kit feel organized rather than chaotic—especially mid-repair.
- 4 LED lights improve “close-up” visibility: For recessed screws and dim corners of a PC case, the built-in lighting earns its keep.
- Good value for frequent tinkerers: For us, the package makes sense if we regularly deal with small fasteners across multiple devices.
Cons
- Not meant for big household jobs: We wouldn’t choose this for furniture, deck screws, or anything that needs serious torque all day.
- Torque settings have a learning curve: We needed a bit of trial and error to find the “safe” setting for different devices/materials.
- Bit overload is real: The variety is great, but it can slow us down until we memorize where our most-used bits live.
- Magnet strength can be a double-edged sword: Great for retention, but it can also make bits “snap” into place (or cling to nearby metal) when we’re trying to be precise.
- Speed & power are tuned for precision: It’s fast enough for tiny screws, but we still reach for a bigger tool when a fastener is stubborn.
Our Quick Take (What It’s Best At)
| Task | How It Feels in Real Use |
|---|---|
| Phones / tablets | Precise, controlled, and less tiring than manual micro-drivers |
| Laptops / PC builds | Fast for repetitive small screws; LEDs help inside dark cases |
| Glasses / watches / tiny gadgets | The torque settings help us avoid “one twist too far” |
| Furniture / heavy-duty tasks | Not our first pick—this kit prefers finesse over force |
Q&A

Is this powerful enough for hardwoods like oak or maple?
This 3.7V mini electric screwdriver is designed for small fasteners and controlled torque—not for driving long wood screws into dense hardwood.It can handle light-duty shop tasks in hardwoods (like installing small brass hinges, hardware screws, or jig fixtures) if you pre-drill properly and use the lower torque settings. For cabinet screws,pocket-hole screws,or repeated driving into oak/maple,you’ll want a full-size 12V/18V drill/driver to avoid stalling and cam-out.
what wood types and tasks does it handle effectively?
It’s best for softwoods and pre-drilled pilot holes in any species—think pine, poplar, plywood carcasses, and shop jigs where you’re using small screws. Woodworkers also tend to like it for “fiddly” work: adjusting fences/stops, installing knob/set-screws, assembling small projects, and mounting light hardware where over-tightening is a risk.Reviews consistently highlight good control thanks to the adjustable torque and compact size.
How does it perform on plywood and veneers—will it damage surfaces?
Plywood and veneered panels are exactly where the 5 torque settings can help. Using a lower setting reduces the chance of spinning out a screw head,stripping the hole in thin plies,or “puckering” a veneer by over-driving. The 4 LED lights are also useful when you’re working inside cabinets/drawers where you can’t get a shop light in close. For best results on veneer, still pre-drill and stop just shy of flush, then finish by hand if you need perfect screw seating.
Can it handle production work or is it just for hobby projects?
It’s primarily a hobby/bench helper rather than a production driver for furniture assembly. The specs/review content points to a fast, convenient tool (200 RPM, USB-C charging, and “400 screws/charge” claims) that shines when you’re dealing with lots of small screws. For day-in/day-out cabinet installation or high-volume assembly with larger wood screws, a dedicated impact driver or clutch-equipped drill will be faster, stronger, and more ergonomic.
How challenging is setup, and what adjustments are available?
Setup is simple: charge via USB-C, select a bit from the magnetic case, and choose a torque setting before driving. Adjustability is one of its strong points—reviews mention the torque settings being genuinely useful once you get the hang of them, especially for delicate work. If you’re used to an 18V drill’s clutch, think of this as a smaller, more delicate version intended to prevent stripping tiny screws rather than muscling through tough material.
Does it work with standard woodworking bits and accessories?
It comes with 64 precision bits (often used for electronics and small hardware), which is great for shop maintenance and small fasteners. Though, it’s not a substitute for standard 1/4″ hex impact bits, long driver bits, countersinks, or specialty woodworking drivers unless the tool specifically accepts that format (many mini kits use smaller “micro” bits). Practically: expect excellent coverage for small Phillips/flat/Torx-style screws,and plan on your regular drill/driver for typical woodworking bit accessories.
Will it fit in a small workshop, and does it need dust collection or special power?
It’s very small and storage-friendly—the magnetic case keeps bits organized, and multiple reviews call out the case design and magnet retention as a real advantage. No dust collection is needed (it’s not a cutting tool). Power is simple: USB-C charging, so any common USB-C charger or power bank in the shop works.Some customers also like that it can charge while stored in the case, which is handy on a crowded bench.
Is this suitable for beginners, and would a professional woodworker still use it?
Beginners generally do well with it because it’s compact, has built-in lighting, and the torque settings help prevent rookie mistakes like stripping small screws—reviews frequently mention it being easy to use and fast for small assemblies. Professionals won’t replace their drill/impact with it, but many will keep a tool like this at the bench for hardware installs, jig tweaks, and any job where “controlled small torque” beats “maximum power.” One reviewer even noted it’s great for many uses including woodworking—but also suggested stepping up to a larger driver for furniture/more demanding work.
transform Your World

The 70-in-1 Cordless Electric Screwdriver set is a compact 3.7V, USB-C rechargeable driver built for small fasteners, with 5 torque settings, a 200 RPM motor, 4 LED lights, and 64 S2 steel bits stored in a magnetic pop-up case. Customer feedback consistently highlights solid build quality, useful torque control, strong bit retention, and battery life/value, with the main limitation being that it’s a mini driver—not a substitute for a full-size drill/driver on furniture builds.
Best for: ideal for hobby woodworkers with small to medium projects, cabinet makers needing precision on hinges/handles, and beginners assembling jigs, fixtures, or shop accessories where over-tightening is a risk.
Consider alternatives if: you primarily work with thick hardwoods, drive lots of long screws, or need daily jobsite durability—a higher-voltage driver will fit better.
Final assessment: a solid, precision-focused shop companion that saves time on light-duty fastening, as long as expectations match its size.
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