Biondi’s International Trading

Gypsum-Screw-Steel-Wood

Available Sizes

#6

3.5 mm x 25

50 mm (S, W)

#7

3.9 mm x 50

63 mm (W)

#8

4.2 mm x 63

75 mm (W)

#10

4.8 mm x 90

150 mm (W)

S = steel;

W = wood

A drywall screw, also called a gypsum screw, is a self-tapping steel screw with countersunk head. It’s phosphate coated to protect it from corrosion. Drywall screws are commonly used in attaching plasterboard, gypsum board, or plaster of Paris work to timber supports or Gypframe C or I studs. 

A screw tek or tek screws can be used on soft materials only such as wood and thin metal. Its self-tapping thread and drilling point allow them to be installed without using a drill.

Screws are also a major category of threaded fasteners. Screws and bolts share a lot of likenesses such as being made of metal and being characterized by a helical ridge. They are both used to fasten materials by the engagement of the screw thread or the external thread with a similar internal thread in the matching part.

Truly, screws and bolts are hard to differentiate with the naked eye. They are both threaded materials and have a head for tightening the fastener, but the most obvious difference is that a bolt is not usually threaded all the way along its shank as it has a plain portion. On the other hand, a screw is threaded fully to the head.

Generally, screws don’t need nuts to get fastened. They become secure by being tightened into the hole using a screwdriver. Screws are usually shorter than the width of the material being screwed and don’t protrude on to the other side.