I'm in total agreement, in every aspect, with both the foregoing posts from Brew & G!
Wayne, if you have the bike's OEM toolkit then that's the driver blade to use (the Phillips 2-point) but it must be in good condition; there's a T-handle in the toolkit to fit over the driver blades, usually a separate item but, in some kits, sometimes is just a slot halfway along in the handle of one of the smaller, pressed steel spanners (wrench). If the tip of the blade is worn then it won't grip in the screw slot (
great idea of Brew's, using the valve grinding paste) and the whole wear-cycle goes full circle: the screws start wearing the tip then the tip ruins more screw heads -- and so it goes. Phillips drivers fit the JIS screw heads very well, but if a screw is corroded or stubborn then use the toolkit driver first to break it loose.
Snap On Phillips tips have tiny, angled barbs machined into the a/c/w vanes' faces for extra grip.
The Unicorn 2600 Impact Driver from eBay's
mrsuperdeals (Rusty Riders) is a great -- and inexpensive -- bit of kit, and the included hardened driver blades fit our screws perfectly
Beware screwdriver tips made by Reed & Prince (45º tip angle -- Phillips is 30º), Pozidriv (extra flutes between the blades' vanes) or GKN SupaDriv (like Pozi but shallower, truncated tip). They definitely
will screw up your heads! Pun intended.