CamJPete
Structural
- Jan 30, 2019
- 25
I thought I understood this, but now I'm slight confused. It seems there are several names for cap screws and I'm trying to figure it out.
A cylindrical socket head cap screw can be called a socket head cap screw. (Not to mention hex-socket cap head screw.) I thought the cap meant that is was cylindrical...but then I saw that countersunk head is called a flat socket cap head screw. So, is a socket head cap screw implied that is cylindrical, unless there is flat in front?
Also, is flat head the preferred name to countersunk screws? Are countersunk and counterbore more reserved for hole types? (I never hear a cylindrical head referred to as a counterbore screw.)
To break it down
Cylindrical or flat refers to head depth shape
Socket refers to the drive, and is often implied to be hex
Cap refers to...the fact that it has a head? Doesn't the word head already tell us that?
Thanks for your help. I like to get the terminology correct.
A cylindrical socket head cap screw can be called a socket head cap screw. (Not to mention hex-socket cap head screw.) I thought the cap meant that is was cylindrical...but then I saw that countersunk head is called a flat socket cap head screw. So, is a socket head cap screw implied that is cylindrical, unless there is flat in front?
Also, is flat head the preferred name to countersunk screws? Are countersunk and counterbore more reserved for hole types? (I never hear a cylindrical head referred to as a counterbore screw.)
To break it down
Cylindrical or flat refers to head depth shape
Socket refers to the drive, and is often implied to be hex
Cap refers to...the fact that it has a head? Doesn't the word head already tell us that?
Thanks for your help. I like to get the terminology correct.