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Technology and process of Pan Head Machine Screw with Flat Washer

Dec 06, 2025

1. Component Manufacturing & Material Science

They start with two different things.

  • The Screw Itself: They begin with a big roll of metal wire. A crazy-fast machine snips a piece off and then smushes it—with a ton of pressure—into that rounded pan head shape. After that, another machine rolls the threads onto the shaft. It’s like clay, but with metal.

  • The Washer: This comes from a flat sheet of metal. Think of a giant hole punch. It just chomp-chomp-chomps, punching out perfect little rings, one after another after another. Its only job is to be a protective pad.

2. The Cool Part: Sticking Them Together

Here’s the magic. Instead of you getting two loose pieces in a bag, the factory puts the washer on for good. Usually, they use a method called spin assembly. A machine slides the washer onto the screw, then spins some tools around to gently squeeze the metal underneath it, creating a little collar. The washer is locked on for life, but it can still spin freely—which is exactly what you want when you’re driving it in.

3. The Final Steps: Toughening Up & Looking Good

Straight off the assembly line, they’re kind of plain and can rust. So, they take a bath. They might get a zinc coating for that shiny, silvery look and rust protection, or a darker, grippier finish. They do this after attaching the washer so it doesn’t get glued in place.

4. Why Bother? What’s the Big Deal?

Why go through all this trouble?

  • You Can’t Lose the Washer: It’s permanently there. No more digging through a parts bag.

  • It’s Way Faster: On an assembly line, a robot arm just picks up one part, not two. Huge time saver.

  • It Just Works Better: Because the washer can spin, it sits flat against your material automatically, protecting it and spreading out the force.