Nov . 06, 2025 13:10 Back to list

Hex Head Wood Screws – Heavy‑Duty, Rust‑Resistant



Field Notes on Hex Head Wood Screws (DIN 571, Zinc White)

If you work around timber structures or crate shops, you already know the quiet reliability of Hex Head Wood Screws. I’ve watched purchasing teams swing back to DIN 571 patterns lately—partly because installers keep asking for an external-hex drive they can hit with a nut-setter, partly because prices stabilized after the plating-zinc rollercoaster. The product in focus here is the Hex Wood Screw with Zinc White DIN 571, sourced from No. 40, Zhuoju Road, Dongmingyang Industrial Park, Mingguan Town, Yongnian District, Handan City, Hebei Province China. Real place, serious output.

Hex Head Wood Screws – Heavy‑Duty, Rust‑Resistant

What they are (and why installers like them)

Technically, DIN 571 is a heavy wood screw with a hex head, coarse wood thread, and a sharp or gimlet point. It fastens a metal or composite part with a through-hole to wood, and the connection is removable—handy when equipment needs service. Many customers say the gripping power in softwood is “shockingly good,” especially if you pre-drill to 60–70% of the minor diameter. And yes, the zinc-white finish looks clean out of the box.

Hex Head Wood Screws – Heavy‑Duty, Rust‑Resistant

Core specs at a glance

Standard DIN 571 (Hex head wood screw)
Material Carbon steel (e.g., C1022/C1045); stainless on request (≈A2/A4)
Finish Zinc white (Cr3+), ≈5–12 μm, ISO 4042 compliant
Diameter × Length M6–M16 × 20–300 mm (common), real-world inventories may vary
Head/Drive External hex, across flats per DIN
Point Gimlet; Type 17 optional for easier start
Strength (indicative) ≈Class 4.8–6.8 for carbon-steel versions; verify per batch test

Quick test notes from shop floors: torque-to-failure in the M10 class often lands around 40–60 N·m in carbon steel, while salt-spray per ASTM B117 shows white corrosion onset ~24–72 h and red rust after ~96–240 h depending on thickness and sealers. Your mileage will vary with humidity and handling.

Process & quality flow (how these are made)

  • Materials: selected wire rod → cutting → cold heading (hex) → thread rolling
  • Heat treatment: as required for strength class; microstructure checked
  • Plating: zinc-white per ISO 4042; baking for hydrogen embrittlement mitigation
  • Testing: dimensions to DIN 571; drive/torque checks; coating thickness; salt-spray (ASTM B117)
  • Documentation: mill certs, PPAP-lite on request; lot traceability
  • Expected service life: indoor C1–C2 ≈5–10 years; mild outdoor C3 ≈2–5 years; for coastal/treated lumber, step up to HDG or stainless
Hex Head Wood Screws – Heavy‑Duty, Rust‑Resistant

Where they’re used

Timber frames, decking ledgers (check local code), crate/packaging hardware, machinery feet into glulam beams, site formwork brackets, and temporary bracing where reusability matters. Actually, maintenance crews love Hex Head Wood Screws because you can back them out without chewing up a recess.

Vendor snapshot (what buyers compare)

Vendor MOQ Coating control Lead time Certs Customization
Hebei maker (DIN 571 focus) ≈10–20k pcs Thickness logged; B117 spot tests 15–30 days ISO 9001 (typical), test reports on lot Lengths, Type 17 point, cartons
Generic importer Mixed Basic thickness check Stock-dependent COC only Limited SKUs
Local distributor By carton On request Immediate for common sizes Supplier docs Small runs, surcharges

Two quick case notes

  • Timber crate shop: swapping lag bolts for Hex Head Wood Screws cut assembly time ≈12% with nut-setters; reduced split-out after adding pilot holes.
  • Farm building retrofit: galvanized brackets into old pine beams—zinc-white worked indoors, but coastal doors later moved to A2 stainless to beat humidity.
Hex Head Wood Screws – Heavy‑Duty, Rust‑Resistant

Standards, compliance, and small print

Look for DIN 571 dimensional conformity, plating per ISO 4042, and corrosion checks via ASTM B117. For timber design in the EU, EN 14592/EN 1995 guidance is your friend; in stainless builds, properties follow ISO 3506. To be honest, spec clarity saves rework—state environment class (C1–C5), wood species, and whether you need Type 17 points.

Citations

  1. DIN 571: Hexagon head wood screws.
  2. ISO 4042: Fasteners — Electroplated coatings.
  3. ASTM B117: Standard Practice for Operating Salt Spray (Fog) Apparatus.
  4. EN 14592: Timber structures — Fasteners.
  5. ISO 3506: Mechanical properties of corrosion-resistant stainless-steel fasteners.
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