Product type
We stock every screw you’ll ever need: tiny micro, self-tapping, drywall, wood, sheet-metal, pan, flat, button, socket cap, shoulder, Phillips, Torx, security, TEK, lag, captive thumb, sealing, left-hand, stainless, zinc, black, brass and nylon—in metric or imperial,There is sufficient stock available and the goods can be dispatched soon.
Process
In our hardware works, one coil of wire feeds every screw: straighten, cold-forge the head (pan, flat, button, socket, shoulder or captive thumb), slot or recess the drive (Phillips, Pozi, Torx, security pin, hex socket), roll the thread from micro 0.3 mm pitch up to lag 6 mm pitch, then heat-treat, zinc, black-oxide, nylon-coat, laser-mark and sort so drywall, TEK, self-tapper, sealing or stainless micro screws roll off the same line, ready for phones, roofs or rockets.
Application
In the palm of your hand, 0.8 mm micro stainless Phillips screws anchor the camera module inside a smartphone; ascend to the office, where hardened 12.9 black-oxide socket-head cap screws clamp the aluminum frame of a 3-D printer while shoulder screws let its gantry glide on micron-thin tolerances; look up—coarse-thread drywall screws stitch gypsum to steel studs, wafer-head TEK screws self-drill through 14-gauge roofing, and EPDM-sealed roofing screws weatherproof solar-panel rails; on the factory floor, zinc-plated pan-head Pozi screws assemble white-goods housings, security Torx screws with pin-in-socket heads keep gaming consoles tamper-proof, and hex-flange bolts torque down the stainless hopper of a food mixer; step outside—silicon-bronze wood screws countersink into teak yacht decks, hot-dip galvanized lag screws bite 6 inches into pressure-treated posts for backyard pergolas, and color-coded plastic thumb screws let cyclists tool-free adjust saddle angles; overhead, Cherry and Hi-Lok lock bolts rivet carbon-fiber aircraft wings, Nord-Lock wedge screws secure wind-turbine nacelles against North-Sea gales, and A325 structural bolts splice the steel bones of skyscrapers; even your sushi arrives on belts driven by stainless elevator screws, while left-hand threaded set screws keep reverse-rotation agitator shafts from unscrewing in chemical vats—so from the tiniest circuit board to the tallest tower, every turn of our screws tightens the modern world.