Premium A2 (304) and A4 (316) stainless steel round head slotted screw. Available in metric coarse threads and select UNC/BSW on request. Mill Test Certificates (MTC), strict dimensional tolerances, and fast dispatch from ready stock.
Stainless Steel Round Head Slotted Screw
Key Specifications
Choosing the Right Stainless Steel Round Head Slotted Screw
Choosing the Right SS Round Head Slotted Screw (Guide)
for stainless steel round head, slotted screws – mainly machine screw usage
1. What is an SS Round Head Slotted Screw?
An SS round head slotted screw is:
A screw with a domed/round head and a flat bearing face underneath
With a single straight slot for a flat-blade screwdriver
Usually supplied as a machine screw (straight shank, machine thread) to be used with a nut or tapped hole
Made from stainless steel (SS 202 / 304 / 316 etc.)
Variants exist:
Machine screw type → used with nut/tapped hole in metal/plastic
Wood / sheet-metal type → special sharp thread and point (for timber/sheet metal)
In an industrial SS fastener catalogue, “round head slotted screw” is typically understood as a machine screw unless otherwise mentioned.
2. When Should You Use an SS Round Head Slotted Screw?
Choose SS round head slotted screws when:
You need a clean, traditional-looking head that is fully round (more domed than pan)
A visible protruding head is acceptable or desired
The joint load is light to medium
Assembly and maintenance are typically done with simple hand tools (flat screwdrivers)
Typical applications:
Older-style panels, instruments, and equipment
Restoration work or retro/classic designs
Electrical and electronic terminal strips, clamps, and covers
Light sheet-metal or plastic parts, fixed with nut or tapped hole
Avoid them when:
You need flush finish → use CSK (countersunk) screws
Very high torque or vibration resistance is required → consider Phillips/Pozi/Torx or hex/socket head
Assembly is mostly with power tools at high speed → slotted heads tend to cam-out and damage easily.
3. Environment & Stainless Grade Selection
a) Choose grade based on environment
A2 (SS 304)
Standard option for general indoor & outdoor industrial use
Suitable for control panels, machines, cabinets, enclosures, brackets
Good corrosion resistance in urban/industrial atmospheres
A4 (SS 316)
Best choice for coastal, marine, poolside, and many chemical environments
Higher resistance to chlorides and pitting
Ideal for food & pharma equipment, marine hardware, chemical plants
SS 202
Lower-cost stainless for dry indoor, non-critical use
Not recommended for outdoor, marine, or wet/corrosive conditions
b) Match surrounding hardware
Match screw grade with hinges, brackets, plates, trims to avoid galvanic or visual mismatch
For harsh environments, keep all exposed hardware in A4 (316) where possible.
4. Head Shape & Slotted Drive – When is it Right?
Round head
Fully domed top – more rounded than a pan head
Flat underside bearing on the surface or washer
Very visible and decorative – often used where the screw head is part of the look
Slightly less bearing area than a large pan head, but often adequate for light clamps/plates.
Use round head when:
A classic/domestic or decorative look is desired
You are fixing plates, nameplates, clips, small fittings
Small projection above surface is acceptable and sometimes helpful (for manual access).
Slotted drive
Pros
Works with very simple hand tools (flat screwdriver)
Matches older standards and aesthetics
Good where torque is low and access is easy
Cons
High risk of cam-out (slipping) especially with power tools
Lower effective torque than Phillips/Pozi/Torx
Slot can damage quickly if screwdriver is the wrong size or misaligned
Use slotted when:
Drawings or customer spec specifically call for slotted
You’re matching existing/retro hardware
Assembly is mostly manual, low-speed, low-moderate torque.
Mechanical Properties (Guide)
Mechanical Properties (Guide) – SS Round Head Slotted Screws
Properties follow standard stainless fastener strength classes for machine screws.
A2-70 (SS 304) – Standard Grade
Material: A2 stainless (≈ SS 304)
Strength class: 70
Minimum tensile strength: ~700 MPa
Proof (yield) strength: ~450 MPa
Typical usage:
General mechanical assemblies
Electrical enclosures, panels, machine covers
Suitable for most indoor and outdoor (non-marine) environments.
A4-70 / A4-80 (SS 316) – High Corrosion Resistance
Material: A4 stainless (≈ SS 316)
A4-70: tensile ~700 MPa
A4-80: tensile ~800 MPa (higher strength version)
Use these when:
Environment is coastal, marine, or chemically aggressive
Hygiene or corrosion-resistance requirements are very high
You need both strength + long-term corrosion performance.
SS 202 (where used)
Material: 200-series Cr-Mn stainless
Strength generally acceptable for many light applications
Corrosion resistance lower than 304/316
Limit to dry indoor, non-critical uses where cost is more important than long life.
In most real-world uses of round head machine screws, the joint’s performance is controlled more by nut/tapped-hole strength, bearing area, and joint design than by the ultimate tensile strength of the screw.
9. Quick Selection Cheat Sheet (For Sales / Floor Use)
Environment
Normal indoor/outdoor → A2-70 (304)
Coastal / chemical / marine → A4-70 or A4-80 (316)
Dry, low-risk, cost-focused → SS 202 (if accepted)
Head Style
Want classic domed look, visible head → Round head slotted
Need low profile but not flush → Pan head
Need perfectly flush → CSK head
Drive
Slotted → when specified by drawing or aesthetic, manual assembly
For easier assembly / higher torque → consider Phillips/Pozi/Torx versions instead.
Size
Small plates → M2–M3
General light duty → M3–M4
Medium duty → M4–M6
Length
Nut joint: parts + washers + nut + 1–3 threads out
Tapped joint: 1–1.5 × diameter thread engagement.





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Frequently Asked Questions
It’s a stainless steel screw with a fully domed (round) head and a straight slot, usually with a machine thread, designed to be used with a nut or in a tapped (threaded) hole. It does not form its own thread.
They are typically used in:
Electrical and electronic terminal strips & small clamps
Light covers, nameplates, and decorative fittings
Instrument panels and classic/retro equipment
Small brackets and hardware where a domed, visible head is preferred
Round head:
Fully domed, more “bulged” look
Slightly smaller bearing area than a wide pan head
Often chosen for appearance / traditional look
Pan head:
Flatter, low rounded head with larger bearing face
Better for load spread on thin material
More “industrial” look
Use round head when you want a classic, very visible dome.
By default, SS round head slotted screws in industrial context are machine screws:
Straight shank with machine thread
Must be used with matching nut or tapped hole
Does not cut its own thread
If it’s meant for wood or sheet metal, it will be specifically called “round head wood screw” or “round head self-tapping screw”.
Works with a simple flat screwdriver
Matches older drawings and traditional aesthetics
Fine for low-speed manual assembly
But:
Slotted heads slip (cam-out) more easily, especially with power drivers
Easier to damage if the screwdriver is the wrong size
So slotted is best where it’s explicitly specified or you want a classic look and mostly hand assembly.
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