Lucky, I can say with absolute confidence that your Japanese motorcycle never, never came with Phillips Head screws. The standards are completely different. JIS is for Japanese Industrial Standard developed in 1916 and yes, has been re-named to ISO9001 and ISO14001. The Phillips was patented by Henry Phillips in 1936 with very different specifications.
Paul, those 18/8 (Grade 2) Stainless Allens are the softest material used in fasteners. They are not equal even to the "4" screws and bolts (Grade 5 equivalent) used in non-critical areas. The "7" bolts and screws are Grade 7 equivalent. Look at a screw/bolt strength chart and you'll see that only the very expensive and hard to find "A4" Stainless grade matches the Grade 5 (8.8 metric) fasteners strength. I've done lots of research on these two subjects and present my findings only to be of service, not argumental. Try a good set of Japanese screwdrivers and you'll love them! I have both 4 piece and 8 piece sets on my website.
I have restored many old Japanese bikes and I have yet to find one that did not work perfectly with my Vessel drivers.
Best Regards, Gordon/RTS
www.rrrtoolsolutions.com
I'm not doubting the usefulness of JIS drivers, but ISO numbers 9001 and 14001 designate quality control and environmental management systems, respectively.
Page 11 of the CB750 FSM says they use ISO standard, what it is and how the cross head compares to the original JIS of 1918 is something I don't know.
But, something I do know that while I've had great luck with my Snap-On impact driver and their number 3 bit, the success comes from pressure applied, not the bit design.
The JIS driver is superior for the application just because it doesn't cam out- the torque is more easily controlled. Even the "patented anti-cam ridges" on my expensive bits wipe out a stiff screw every once in awhile. If I had a set of JIS bits for my impact driver, I'd use them, especially after picking up a couple JIS hand drivers.