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Custom Fastener Coating Inspection: Thickness, Adhesion and Salt Spray

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Custom fastener coating inspection should not be treated as a final visual check. For drawing-based bolts, special studs, anchors, washers, and non-standard assemblies, coating affects corrosion resistance, thread fit, torque behavior, appearance, and field service life.

A coated fastener may look acceptable, but still fail inspection if the coating is too thin, too thick, poorly bonded, or unable to meet the required corrosion test.

For buyers, coating requirements should be confirmed before production, not after the parts are packed.

Why Coating Inspection Matters for Custom Fasteners

Custom fasteners often have special geometry: long thread sections, shoulders, recesses, welded parts, bent shapes, or partial coating zones. These details make coating control more difficult than standard bulk fasteners.

For drawing-based products, buyers should use custom non-standard fasteners and define coating inspection points directly in the drawing or RFQ.

Main Inspection Risks

Risk AreaPossible ProblemBuyer Concern
Thread areaCoating too thickNut may run tight or fail gauge test
Edges and cornersThin coatingEarly corrosion risk
Recessed areasPoor coverageUneven protection
Coating adhesionPeeling or flakingField failure and rejected parts
Salt spray resultRed rust or white rust too earlyProject non-compliance

Coating Thickness Inspection

Coating thickness is usually one of the first items checked. Too little coating may reduce corrosion protection. Too much coating may affect assembly, especially on threads.

For custom fasteners, inspection should include critical areas, not only flat surfaces.

What to Check

  • Minimum and maximum coating thickness
  • Thread fit after coating
  • Coating uniformity on heads, shanks, and threaded sections
  • Masked or uncoated zones if required
  • Coating report linked to batch number

For corrosion-focused orders, buyers can compare various coated fasteners before choosing zinc plating, hot-dip galvanizing, zinc flake, PTFE, or other coating systems.

Adhesion Inspection

Adhesion shows whether the coating properly bonds to the fastener surface. Poor adhesion may come from oil, scale, poor pretreatment, unsuitable curing, or rough handling after coating.

Different coating systems require different adhesion checks. Tape testing, cross-cut testing, bend checks, or project-specific methods may be used depending on coating type and fastener shape.

Practical Adhesion Checks

Coating TypeAdhesion ConcernInspection Note
Zinc platingPeeling, blisteringCheck surface preparation and post-treatment
Zinc flakeFlaking at edges or threadsConfirm curing and handling control
PTFE coatingPoor bonding or scratchesCheck thread fit and surface coverage
Paint or organic coatingPeeling from substrateUse approved adhesion method
الجلفنة بالغمس الساخنFlaking or heavy buildupCheck impact areas and thread fit

Adhesion should be checked before shipment because damaged coating is difficult to repair consistently after packing.

Salt Spray Testing

Salt spray testing is used to compare corrosion resistance under controlled lab conditions. It is useful, but buyers should understand its limits. Salt spray hours are not a direct guarantee of real outdoor service life.

The test result depends on coating type, part geometry, exposure time, acceptance criteria, and whether the requirement is for white rust or red rust.

Salt Spray RFQ Details

عنصرWhat Buyers Should Define
Test standardISO 9227, ASTM B117, or project requirement
Test durationRequired hours
Failure criteriaWhite rust, red rust, blistering, peeling
Sample quantityNumber of pieces tested
Test reportMust match batch and coating lot
Photo evidenceBefore and after test if required

For high-strength fasteners, coating inspection should also consider hydrogen embrittlement risk when electroplating is used. Buyers can review high-strength fasteners when strength and coating control are both critical.

Common Buyer Mistakes

Avoid these issues:

  • Requesting “zinc plated” without thickness requirement.
  • Asking for salt spray hours without acceptance criteria.
  • Ignoring thread fit after coating.
  • Approving samples without checking adhesion.
  • Mixing different coating lots in one shipment.
  • Forgetting baking requirements for high-strength electroplated parts.
  • Treating custom fasteners like standard stock parts.

RFQ Checklist for Coating Inspection

Before ordering custom coated fasteners, provide:

  1. Product drawing and coating zone
  2. Coating type and color
  3. Thickness requirement
  4. Adhesion test requirement
  5. Salt spray standard and hours
  6. Thread gauge inspection after coating
  7. Hydrogen embrittlement control if required
  8. Coating report and batch traceability
  9. Packing method to protect coated surfaces

For complete sourcing, buyers can review the full fastener products range and define coating requirements before production.

Final Advice

Custom fastener coating inspection should focus on thickness, adhesion, salt spray performance, thread fit, and traceability. Appearance alone is not enough.

A clear coating specification helps suppliers choose the right process, control production, and provide inspection records that match the real application.

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