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Round Neck Carriage Bolt: The Complete Industry Technical Guide

Apr 29, 2026

1. What Is a Round Neck Carriage Bolt?

round neck carriage bolt — also called a coach bolt in British and Australian standards — is a specialized fastener characterized by a smooth, low-profile dome head, a square or ribbed shank section immediately beneath the head, and a fully or partially threaded cylindrical body. The square "neck" section is the defining engineering feature: when driven into a pre-drilled square hole or forced into a softer substrate (typically timber), it bites in and prevents the bolt from rotating while a nut is tightened from the opposite side.

Unlike hex-head bolts that require a wrench on both ends, carriage bolts require only a single wrench on the nut side — making them ideal for applications where access to the bolt head is limited or where a flush, tamper-resistant surface is required.

Round Neck Carriage Bolt — Part Anatomy① Dome Round HeadLow-profile, tamper-resistant, smooth finish② Square Neck (Anti-Rotation)Grips substrate to prevent spin during torquing③ Threaded ShankFull or partial thread; standard metric/UNC pitch④ Hex Nut + WasherApplied from reverse side; single-tool installationOverall Length (L)
Fig. 1 — Anatomical cross-section of a Round Neck Carriage Bolt showing its four principal zones. Original illustration by Tuyue Fastener.

2. Anatomy & Structural Design

2.1 The Dome Head

The round, hemispherical head provides several engineering advantages. Its smooth exterior offers no purchase for standard wrenches, making the installed joint highly resistant to unauthorized removal from the accessible (head) side. The broad bearing surface distributes load over a wider area than a hex-head bolt, reducing surface deformation in softer substrates like timber and plastics.

2.2 The Square Neck

Immediately below the dome sits the square neck section — typically 1 to 2 thread-pitches in length. The square cross-section is dimensionally slightly larger than the bolt's nominal shank diameter, which means it must be pressed into a matching pre-drilled square hole or hammered into a round hole in softer materials. This mechanical interlock is the primary anti-rotation mechanism, eliminating the need for a second tool on the head side.

In some specialized variants — particularly those used in metal-to-metal applications — the square neck is replaced by a ribbed or finned neck (also called a "mushroom-head rivet bolt") that bites into a round hole, achieving the same rotational lock without requiring a square pilot.

2.3 Shank Threading

Carriage bolt shanks are either fully threaded (thread runs from neck to tip) or partially threaded (a smooth grip zone exists beneath the neck). Full threading maximizes length adjustment flexibility; partial threading provides a stronger unthreaded shear zone ideal for structural applications where bolts pass through multiple members.

Standard thread forms include Metric Coarse (ISO 68-1), Unified National Coarse (UNC — ASME B1.1), and Whitworth (BSW) for legacy British specifications.

3. International Standards & Dimensions

Round neck carriage bolts are governed by several major international standards. Understanding which standard applies is critical for interoperability and procurement:

Key Standards: DIN 603 (Germany/EU), ASME/ANSI B18.5 (USA), ISO 8677, BS 4933 (UK). Always confirm the applicable standard with your supplier before placing an order.
Nominal Diameter Head Diameter (dk) Head Height (k) Square Neck Side (a) Common Length Range Standard
M6 16 mm 4.0 mm 6.0 mm 20–100 mm DIN 603
M8 21 mm 5.5 mm 8.0 mm 25–150 mm DIN 603
M10 25 mm 6.5 mm 10.0 mm 30–200 mm DIN 603
M12 30 mm 7.5 mm 12.0 mm 40–250 mm DIN 603
M16 38 mm 9.5 mm 16.0 mm 50–300 mm DIN 603
1/4" 0.594" 0.152" 0.245" 3/4"–6" ASME B18.5
3/8" 0.875" 0.220" 0.365" 1"–8" ASME B18.5
1/2" 1.125" 0.285" 0.490" 1.5"–10" ASME B18.5
Reference: DIN 603:1993 & ASME B18.5-2012. Tuyue supplies custom lengths on request — contact our sales team.

4. Material Grades & Mechanical Properties

Material selection is the single most consequential decision when specifying carriage bolts. The combination of base metal and heat treatment determines tensile strength, proof load, yield strength, hardness, and fatigue resistance.

Tensile Strength by Material Grade (MPa)04008001200Tensile Strength (MPa)400Cl. 4.6Carbon800Cl. 8.8Alloy1040Cl. 10.9High-tens.700A2-70SS 304800A4-80SS 316
Fig. 2 — Comparative tensile strength of common carriage bolt material and grade combinations. Reference: ISO 898-1 (carbon & alloy steel) and ISO 3506-1 (stainless steel).

4.1 Carbon Steel Grades

The most common carriage bolt material is low- to medium-carbon steel (typically C15 to C35 grade). At Tuyue's Hardware and Fasteners range, carriage bolts are produced from high-quality carbon steel meeting ISO 898-1 property class designations:

  • Property Class 4.6: 400 MPa tensile strength; general-purpose applications with light loads; easy installation.
  • Property Class 8.8: 800 MPa tensile strength; medium-carbon alloy steel with quench-and-temper treatment; the most widely specified structural grade.
  • Property Class 10.9: 1,040 MPa; for high-load or vibration-prone environments; often used in automotive chassis and heavy machinery.

4.2 Stainless Steel

For chemically aggressive or marine environments, stainless steel carriage bolts (A2-304 and A4-316) eliminate the risk of corrosion-induced joint failure. A4-316 grade (with 2–3% molybdenum addition) is particularly resistant to chloride environments such as coastal and offshore installations. Tuyue's Stainless Steel Bolt, Nut, Screws & Washers catalogue includes A2 and A4 variants to ISO 3506-1.

4.3 Galvanized & Specialty Grades

Hot-dip galvanized (HDG) carbon steel carriage bolts offer a cost-effective middle ground between plain carbon steel and stainless steel. The galvanizing coat (typically 45–85 µm per ASTM A153 or ISO 1461) sacrificially protects the steel substrate even when the coating is mechanically damaged. These are standard in outdoor timber decking, playground equipment, and agricultural structures.

5. Surface Treatments & Corrosion Protection

Salt Spray Resistance by Surface Finish (hrs to first corrosion)8 hrs — Plain / Bare Steel96 hrs — Electro Zinc (bright)200 hrs — Yellow Zinc Passivate500+ hrs — Hot Dip Galvanized1000+ hrs — Stainless Steel A4-316Reference: ISO 9227 salt spray test. Actual performance depends on film thickness, substrate preparation, and environment.
Fig. 3 — Indicative salt spray resistance comparison for common carriage bolt surface finishes. Sources: ISO 9227, ASTM B117, manufacturer datasheets.

The choice of surface treatment must balance cost, corrosion performance, and the need to maintain dimensional tolerances on the threaded section. Key options include:

  • Electroplated Zinc (Clear or Yellow Passivate): 5–12 µm coating; good for indoor and dry environments; economical; risk of hydrogen embrittlement in high-strength grades (>10.9).
  • Mechanical Zinc Plating: 13–25 µm; no hydrogen embrittlement risk; preferred for high-strength bolts.
  • Hot-Dip Galvanizing (HDG): 45–85 µm; excellent outdoor performance; note that thread tolerances shift post-galvanizing and nuts must be tapped oversize per ISO 10684.
  • Geomet / Dacromet (Geomet® 321): 8–12 µm inorganic zinc-flake coating; 720+ hours salt spray; no hydrogen embrittlement; widely used in automotive and outdoor structural applications.
  • Black Oxide: Primarily aesthetic with minimal corrosion benefit; requires supplementary oil or wax coating; used in decorative interior joinery.
⚠ Important Note on HDG Thread Fit: Hot-dip galvanizing deposits 45–85 µm of zinc, significantly thickening the threaded section. Per ISO 10684, galvanized bolts must be supplied with "tapped" (oversize) nuts to ensure assembly. Do not attempt to mate an HDG bolt with a standard nut — thread stripping or galling will result.

6. Key Industry Applications

6.1 Timber Construction & Structural Decking

Round neck carriage bolts are the fastener of choice for wood-to-wood and wood-to-metal connections in residential and commercial construction. Their flush dome head eliminates protruding bolt edges that could cause injury or interfere with surface finishes. Typical applications include deck framing, post-to-beam connections, balustrade rails, pergola structures, playground equipment, and bridge timber work.

For treated timber (CCA or ACQ preservative-treated wood), stainless steel or hot-dip galvanized bolts must be specified, as copper-based preservatives aggressively corrode plain zinc plating. Browse Tuyue's full hardware and fastener catalogue for HDG and stainless options.

6.2 Infrastructure & Steel Construction

In steel-to-steel or steel-to-timber connections — such as guard rail mounting, bridge fencing, and utility pole attachment — carriage bolts provide the advantage of installation from one side when access to the back face is restricted. High-strength Grade 8.8 or 10.9 variants are used alongside structural washers to achieve specified preload levels.

6.3 Automotive & Rolling Stock

Carriage bolts secure interior panels, seat mounting frames, and body component brackets where a smooth exterior face is essential for safety and aesthetics. The automotive industry typically specifies Grade 8.8 or 10.9 bolts with Geomet or Dacromet coatings for superior corrosion resistance and low hydrogen embrittlement risk. For related fastener solutions, see Tuyue's Specialty Fasteners range.

6.4 Solar & Photovoltaic Mounting Systems

The rapid global expansion of solar installations has driven significant demand for corrosion-resistant fasteners that can withstand 25+ year design lives in outdoor environments. Stainless steel A2 or A4 carriage bolts are widely used in mounting rail-to-bracket connections. Tuyue supplies dedicated fastener packages for PV racking through the Solar and Photovoltaic Module fastener product line.

6.5 Agricultural & General Industrial Equipment

Farm machinery, grain silos, equipment enclosures, and conveyor frames frequently use hot-dip galvanized carriage bolts. The smooth head profile avoids snagging materials or clothing in machinery environments.

7. Installation Techniques & Torque Requirements

Installation Sequence — Round Neck Carriage BoltDrill HoleRound hole= nominal dia.Square=optionalfor metalInsert BoltHead side first.Tap square neckflush with ahammer / malletAdd WasherPlace flat washeron thread endto spread loadon substrateTorque NutHand-tightennut, then applytorque wrench tospec (see table)VerifyHead flushNo rotationCheck protrusion≥ 2 threads
Fig. 4 — Four-step installation sequence for round neck carriage bolts in timber or metal substrates.

7.1 Recommended Torque Values

Proper preload is critical for joint integrity. The following indicative torque values apply to ISO Property Class 8.8 bolts with lightly oiled threads (friction coefficient µ ≈ 0.13). Always consult the project structural engineer for critical connections.

Bolt Diameter Proof Load (kN) Target Torque (Nm) Min. Clamp Force
M6 9.1 10–12 Nm 6 kN
M8 16.3 24–28 Nm 11 kN
M10 25.6 48–55 Nm 17 kN
M12 37.4 84–96 Nm 25 kN
M16 69.4 200–230 Nm 47 kN
Reference: VDI 2230 and ISO 898-1. Values are for Property Class 8.8 with µ=0.13. Adjust for dry (+30%) or lubricated (−10%) conditions.

7.2 Installation Best Practices

  • Always pre-drill to the nominal bolt diameter — avoid undersized holes that resist seating the square neck correctly.
  • For timber, use a mallet (not a steel hammer directly on the head) to drive the square neck flush, protecting the dome surface.
  • Use a flat washer under the nut in all applications to distribute clamping force and protect the substrate surface from nut indentation.
  • Where vibration or dynamic loading is present, specify a locking nut (Nyloc) or thread-locking compound in addition to the standard nut.
  • Do not impact-drive the nut — use a torque wrench to achieve the specified preload accurately.
  • For HDG bolts mated with oversize nuts, lightly grease the thread before assembly to avoid galling.

8. Selection Guide: How to Choose the Right Carriage Bolt

Quick Decision Matrix: Select based on four criteria in order — (1) Load requirement → grade selection; (2) Environment → coating/material; (3) Substrate type → head/neck geometry; (4) Regulatory compliance → applicable standard.

When specifying round neck carriage bolts for a project, engineers and procurement teams should evaluate the following parameters systematically:

  1. Tensile / Shear Load: Calculate the design load and select property class accordingly. Over-specifying wastes cost; under-specifying risks joint failure.
  2. Operating Environment: Indoor dry → zinc electroplate; outdoor exposed → HDG or SS A2; coastal/chemical → SS A4 or Geomet.
  3. Substrate: Timber → round-hole drive-fit; steel plate → square pre-punched hole or round-with-ribbed-neck variant.
  4. Length: Ensure a minimum of 2 full thread pitches protrude beyond the nut after installation; account for grip length (total material thickness) plus thread engagement depth.
  5. Regulatory / Standards Compliance: Confirm the applicable standard (DIN 603, ASME B18.5, ISO 8677) with your engineer or client specification.

Tuyue provides custom-length carriage bolts and accepts mixed-grade, mixed-coating orders for project-specific requirements. Enquire via the Contact page or review common questions on the FAQ page.

9. Frequently Asked Technical Questions

Q: Can I use a carriage bolt in a round hole in metal plate?

Yes — ribbed-neck or finned-neck carriage bolt variants are specifically designed for this purpose. The ribs bite into the edge of a round hole in mild steel, providing rotation lock without a square hole. For structural applications, verify the pull-through strength against design requirements.

Q: What happens if I over-torque a carriage bolt in timber?

Excessive torque pulls the dome head into the wood surface and can cause the square neck to strip its interlock, allowing the bolt to spin. It may also crush the wood fibres around the hole, reducing long-term clamp load. Always use a calibrated torque wrench and a washer under the nut for timber applications.

Q: Can carriage bolts be reused after disassembly?

Carbon steel carriage bolts at property class 8.8 or below can generally be reused if the threads are undamaged, the bolt has not been torqued beyond yield, and the coating is intact. High-strength (10.9 and above) bolts should not be reused in structural applications once fully torqued, as plastic deformation in the shank cannot be reliably assessed visually.

Q: What is the difference between DIN 603 and ASME B18.5?

DIN 603 is the European metric standard for round-neck square-neck carriage bolts. ASME B18.5 covers inch-series (UNC) carriage bolts to North American dimensional conventions. While functionally equivalent, they differ in head diameter, head height, square neck depth, and thread pitch. Always confirm the applicable standard with your client or engineer.

Q: Are there stainless steel carriage bolts that also meet a structural standard?

Yes. ISO 3506-1 governs the mechanical properties of stainless steel fasteners. A4-70 and A4-80 grades achieve 700–800 MPa tensile strength respectively. For structural timber applications in aggressive environments, A4-80 stainless carriage bolts are the premium specification. See Tuyue's Stainless Steel Fasteners range for available options.