ConnBolt.jpg
If anyone knows of a place where to buy connector bolts in the color shown ... NOT bronze or black ... please advise. I'll be using them to assemble pine-material benches and would rather that they not stand-out.
ConnBolt.jpg
If anyone knows of a place where to buy connector bolts in the color shown ... NOT bronze or black ... please advise. I'll be using them to assemble pine-material benches and would rather that they not stand-out.
Those look like yellow zinc plated...Amazon has them in a few sizes, mostly metric. They also have some brass and nickel plated.
--I had my patience tested. I'm negative--
I think those threads , are too fine for pine. Long wind up ,for quick rip out. Go coarser .
Look out...You can buy things called connector bolts, and you can buy things called connector screws. Both have that big flat head, and the hex drive. Connector bolts have metal threading, like 1/4-20. Connector screws have wood screw threads. The posted pic looks like it might be a connector screw.
I'm looking for BOLTS that I'll be using with INSERT NUTS ... not threading into the pine. I've used a few hundred of the bronze type bolts with barrel nuts that I bought from Lee Valley. I've spent a lot-of-time looking at what comes-up on Amazon ... then going to the various 'brand' sites that display the color that I'm looking for. Typically that color is available in 1" - 1 1/2" lengths. When I go to the lengths that I'm looking for ... the color changes to black or bronze. The exception being the stainless steel versions.
How about this Sam...
https://www.mcfeelys.com/search/?q=connecting%20bolts
That's great, Nick ... thank you ... that's the 'solution' that I've been looking for. McFeely's popped-up in several search-screens; yet, when I would go there ... that screen never presented. The SMC 'collective' does-it-again ... ...
Pointless technical 'point'.
They're both 'screws'. They can be threaded into a tapped hole, wood, or used with a nut.
A 'bolt' has to be used with a nut, like a carriage bolt, or u-bolt.
One of them is a 'machine screw', the other a 'wood screw' ... 'lag screw' ...