I immediately eliminated the thought that one screw would be enough and luckily remembered that I had screw extractors that I had never used. Presumably left over from a tool impulse purchase, I pulled them out and found some useful instructions online (wikihow stripped screw, wikihow screw extractor, and the best, a screw extractor step by step slideshow on about.com).
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjJLVf0Mbc5A2kTibT5XzZIDLVNUbahlX5s2D65HLxFDjo_EV-LOGSs3iCNHv8ggyn1rr3FAEhc70NQH45mAxFvjIc5j47Ub0xubj4OEjMr7HEl6dVa6OStIGK1lXq8TowwSmjN/s400/100_0783.jpg)
Miracle of miracles, I was successful. You may never need to do this, I have had these tools for at least seven years and never used them, but it nice to know they work if you need them.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEheJnkBmkWRQjcOFudAtfcTsOR87nTj45BP75FW-SM3qK1fQq7xSbcyHODE0AOehk_0a9DelyUAsB9aXWUFLT3J4SbPAwuoF8ykmtUwtvd9I0uTI1eGVBUobspcLxK00jOxw9_e/s400/100_0781.jpg)
The picture above is a close up of the twisted off head and the screw bit on the extractor. You drill a hole in the screw you are trying to extract and then screw in the screw extractor. The trick is that it is threaded opposite of a screw. Turning it counterclockwise buries it in the screw to be extracted and grabs it even as it turns the screw counterclockwise to unscrew it. Genius.
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