I’m not renown for the contra
I hope that's justified
I don't know about "renown" in my case, but all of us (particularly myself) are more than capable of being wrong - which is why, if you read through my posts in this forum and elsewhere, you will find countless occasions on which I've typed "... but I may be wrong" or suchlike. Indeed, unlike some, I rarely, if ever, 'assert' unless I am absolutely certain about something. Again, if you read my posts, you'll see that I generally write things like "it is my understanding that ...", "I believe that ....", "I think that ...." etc. (often followed by the "(but I may be wrong")", rather than 'asserting'.
I find the opposite; driving screws at high speed, with the added pressure from your hand, exacerbates tiny oscillations in the setup with the effect that the screw/bit/chuck assembly wags around more and is more likely to slip apart
Fair enough - but, in case it wasn't clear, I was not talking about 'driving screws at high (chuck) speed' but, rather 'driving screws with the drill set to its higher speed setting'. In either case I would control the chuck speed (by use of the trigger) to the same (usually pretty low) speed.
If you routinely experience cam out, ensure you’re driving using the bit appropriate for the screw; PZ bit in PZ screw (most modern wood screws), PH bits for PH screws .... and that the number matches (don’t drive a PZ3 screw with a PZ2 bit)
Yes, I learned all that very many years ago, and am always careful to use the correct type and size of bit.
If all matches check that bit and screw head are in good, un-worn condition. After toiver driven a thousand screws and had the bit bounce round inside a few of them, chewing the head, you’ll have worn the edges off the bit’s drive flanges:
I'm also very aware of that. I generally buy bits, usually 'good quality' ones (generally deWalt) in large batches, and change them very frequently, not the least because it's a bit of a 'vicious circle' - since 'camming out' is presumably one of the things that can cause damage to the bit (as well as to the screw head).
You may not agree, but I'm inclined to think that 'cross-head' screws (PZ, PH etc.) and, in fact, almost all heads other than 'slotted' ones (e.g. 'Torx etc.) are somewhat of a two-edged sword. When they (and the driver/bit) are intact, they are great, and offer many advantages over traditional slotted-head screws. However, once they become damaged (or covered in countless coats of paint over the years/decades, it's a different story. With slotted head ones, one can usually clean the paint out of the slot and effect 'repairs' to damaged ones (e.g. deepening the slot) but (at least, for me) it's much more difficult to remove a non-slotted screw whose head has been damaged or clogged up. If it's a reasonable size of screw, one can drill down the middle and then use a 'tap remover' (with LH thread) but if its a small screw, it's often the case that all one could do is the 'drill (or even 'grind') off the head' and hope there's enough shaft left to get a mole wrength onto, to unscrew it!