Archive for February, 2009

Head Screws

Monday, February 23rd, 2009

Head Screws : The Common Shape of Head Screws

(a) pan, A low disc with chamfered outer edge

(b) button, or dome head cylindrical with a rounded top

(c) round, Dome-shaped, commonly used for machine screws

(d) truss, Lower-profile dome designed to prevent tampering

(e) flat (countersunk), Conical, with flat outer face and tapering inner face allowing it to sink into the material

(f) oval Pan head, or raised head countersunk with a rounded top

Head Screws

Head Screws

Some varieties of screw are manufactured with a break-away head, which snaps off when adequate torque is applied. This prevents tampering and disassembly and also provides an easily-inspectable joint to guarantee proper assembly. An example of this is the shear bolts used on car steering columns, to secure the ignition switch.

Types of screw

  • Screw heads are usually flat, oval or round, and each has a specific purpose for final seating and appearance.
  • Flat heads are always countersunk or rest flush with the surface.
  • Oval heads permit countersinking, but the head protrudes somewhat.
  • Round-headed screws rest on top of the material and are easiest to remove.

Screw types include the wood screw for when stronger joining than a nail is needed, or for when other materials must be fastened to wood. This screw is tapered to help draw the wood together as the screw is inserted.

A sheet metal screw can also be used to fasten metal to wood, as well as metal to metal, plastic or other materials. Sheet metal screws are threaded completely from the point to the head, and the threads are sharper than those of wood screws.

Machine screws are used for joining metal parts, such as hinges to metal door jambs. These are inserted into tapped (pre-threaded) holes and are sometimes used with washers and nuts.

Lag screws, or square-headed bolts with screw heads, are for heavy holding and are driven in with a wrench rather than a screwdriver.

When choosing screw length, remember that the screw should penetrate 2/3 of the combined thickness of the materials being joined. Consider as well moisture conditions and the make-up of the materials being fastened, to avoid corrosion.

Use galvanized or other rust-resistant screws where rust could be a problem.

Posted by : Agus Mardiana


Hand Screwdrivers

Saturday, February 21st, 2009

Hand Screwdrivers

Hand screwdriver

Hand screwdriver

The screwdriver’s main purpose is to connect with and tighten or loosen fastening screws. Usually the design consists of a molded plastic handle and a thin metal shaft with a special head that fits each particular screw type. The two most widely used screwdrivers are the flathead and the Phillips head screwdrivers.

Fast Facts

1. Invention of the late Middle Ages

2. Origin: Europe

3. Early screwdriving innovator: Leonardo da Vinci

4. Phillips screwdriver debut: 1934

5. Phillips screwdriver inventor: Henry F. Phillips

6. Phillips head screwdrivers fit with screws that have a crosshead design; that is, the screw’s groove is shaped like a plus sign

7. Flathead screwdrivers connect with screws that are simply slotted like a minus sign

Other Popular Screwdriver Types

1. Robertson (screw groove is square-shaped)

2. Hex (screw groove is hexagonal)

3. Torx (screw groove is star-shaped, as if two triangles were placed on top of one another)

A screw is a shaft with a helical groove or thread formed on its surface and provision at one end to turn the screw , a screw has a head with a contour such that an appropriate screwdriver tip can be engaged in it in such a way that the application of sufficient torque to the screwdriver will cause the screw to rotate.

The screwdriver comprises a head or tip which engages with a screw, a mechanism to apply torque. This is how hard the drill or tools can twist. Generally, the higher the torque the better it will perform.

In physics, torque can informally be thought of as “rotational force”….

By rotating the tip, and some way to position and support the screwdriver. A typical hand screwdriver comprises an approximately cylindrical handle of a size and shape to be held by a human hand, and an axial shaft.

Posted by : Agus Mardiana