For global fastener buyers, metric thread and inch thread confusion is one of the most common sourcing problems. The bolt may look close. The diameter may seem similar. But if the pitch system is wrong, the nut will not assemble correctly, and the whole batch may become unusable.
This issue appears often in machinery repair, replacement parts, OEM orders, and mixed-standard projects. The safest approach is simple: never confirm a fastener only by outside diameter.
What Is Metric Thread?
How Metric Thread Is Described
Metric thread is measured in millimeters. A typical description is M12 × 1.75, where M12 is the nominal diameter and 1.75 mm is the thread pitch.
Metric threads are widely used in Europe, China, most Asian markets, and many international industrial projects. Common standards include ISO and DIN specifications.
Buyers can review common standard fasteners when sourcing regular metric bolts, nuts, screws, and washers.
What Is Inch Thread?
UNC and UNF Threads
Inch thread is usually measured by threads per inch, also called TPI. For example, 1/2”-13 UNC means a 1/2 inch nominal diameter with 13 threads per inch.
UNC means Unified Coarse Thread. UNF means Unified Fine Thread. These are common in the United States, Canada, and equipment built to American standards.
| Thread System | Example | Pitch Description | Common Markets |
|---|---|---|---|
| Metric coarse | M12 × 1.75 | Millimeters between threads | Europe, Asia, global machinery |
| Metric fine | M12 × 1.5 | Smaller metric pitch | Automotive, precision assemblies |
| UNC | 1/2”-13 | 13 threads per inch | U.S. industrial equipment |
| UNF | 1/2”-20 | 20 threads per inch | Automotive, aerospace-related uses |
Key Differences Buyers Should Check
Do Not Rely on Diameter Alone
Some metric and inch fasteners look similar but are not interchangeable. For example, M12 and 1/2 inch are close in size, but the thread pitch is different.
Before ordering, confirm:
- Nominal diameter
- Thread pitch or TPI
- Thread standard
- Coarse or fine thread
- Nut or tapped hole compatibility
- Thread tolerance if required
- Coating impact on thread fit
For replacement bolts or unclear samples, buyers should use gauges instead of photos.
When Custom Thread Requirements Are Needed
Mixed-Standard Projects
Custom fasteners are often required when equipment uses a special thread, non-standard length, partial thread, or matched assembly. This is common in maintenance projects where old machinery uses inch threads while new parts use metric threads.
For these cases, custom non-standard fasteners should be quoted with a drawing or measured sample.
| Buying Scenario | Recommended Action |
|---|---|
| New metric equipment | Use ISO/DIN metric fasteners |
| U.S. machinery repair | Confirm UNC or UNF |
| Unknown sample | Check with thread gauge |
| OEM custom assembly | Provide drawing and tolerance |
| Coated threads | Test nut fit after coating |
Final Advice
Metric thread and inch thread selection should be confirmed before price comparison. A low-cost fastener with the wrong thread is not a saving; it is a failed purchase.
For complete assemblies, review the full fastener products range and define the thread system clearly in the RFQ. Include diameter, pitch or TPI, thread standard, material, grade, finish, and matching nut requirements.