Ordering fasteners from China with only physical samples is common. Many buyers do not have drawings, standards, or old purchase records. They only have one used bolt, a worn nut, a screw from equipment maintenance, or an anchor taken from a jobsite.
This can work, but it needs a controlled process. A sample is useful, but it is not a complete specification.
Why Samples Alone Are Risky
A Sample Shows Shape, Not Full Requirements
A fastener sample helps identify size, thread, head style, and surface finish. But it may not confirm material grade, heat treatment, coating thickness, hardness, or original standard.
A used sample may also be worn, stretched, rusted, or damaged.
| Sample Detail | Can Usually Be Checked | May Still Be Unknown |
|---|---|---|
| Diámetro | Yes | Original tolerance |
| Longitud | Yes | Correct working length if worn |
| Thread pitch | Yes | Thread tolerance class |
| Head shape | Yes | Original production standard |
| Coating color | Partly | Coating thickness and salt spray |
| Material | Not by appearance | Grade, chemistry, heat treatment |
| Fuerza | Not by appearance | Tensile, proof load, hardness |
For common products, buyers should first compare the sample with standard fasteners to see if it matches an existing DIN, ISO, ASTM, or ANSI item.
Step 1: Identify the Fastener Type
Start With the Basic Form
Before asking for price, define what the part is.
Is it a hex bolt, socket screw, carriage bolt, stud bolt, anchor bolt, washer, nut, self-tapping screw, or custom part?
For bolts and screws, check:
- Head type
- Drive type
- Diámetro
- Longitud
- Thread pitch
- Longitud del hilo
- Full thread or partial thread
- Point or end shape
For bolt-related items, review common bolt products. For washers, check washer products.
Step 2: Measure the Sample Correctly
Do Not Measure Only Overall Length
Use calipers, thread gauges, and weight checks. If possible, provide clear photos beside a ruler and send several samples, not only one piece.
Important dimensions include:
- Major diameter
- Overall length
- Thread pitch
- Longitud del hilo
- Head height
- Width across flats or head diameter
- Shank diameter
- Washer ID, OD, and thickness if included
For special parts, these measurements should be converted into a drawing before production.
Step 3: Confirm Material and Grade
Appearance Is Not Enough
A carbon steel bolt and alloy steel bolt may look similar. Stainless steel grades may also look similar. Do not rely on color or magnet response alone.
Ask the supplier to confirm:
- Material grade
- Mechanical property class
- Hardness requirement
- Heat treatment requirement
- Certificate requirement
- Application load condition
For load-bearing parts, compare high-strength fasteners and request test reports before mass production.
Step 4: Check Coating and Surface Finish
The sample may be zinc plated, hot-dip galvanized, black oxide, zinc flake, PTFE coated, or stainless steel. But old samples can lose color or coating after use.
For corrosion-sensitive applications, provide the working environment:
- Indoor or outdoor
- Marine or humid area
- Underground or chemical exposure
- Required salt spray hours
- Color requirement
- Thread fit after coating
For finish options, review various coated fasteners.
Step 5: Make a Drawing Before Mass Production
Samples Should Become Controlled Specifications
If the part is not a standard item, the supplier should prepare a drawing for approval. The buyer should check every dimension before production starts.
For non-standard items, use custom non-standard fasteners.
A good drawing should show:
| Drawing Item | Why It Matters |
|---|---|
| Dimensions | Prevents wrong size production |
| Tolerances | Controls fit and assembly |
| Material | Confirms strength and corrosion resistance |
| Finish | Controls coating and appearance |
| Thread details | Prevents nut mismatch |
| Inspection points | Avoids disputes after production |
Step 6: Approve a Pre-Production Sample
Before bulk production, ask for a sample or first-piece inspection report. Compare it with the original sample and the approved drawing.
Check assembly fit with mating nuts, washers, holes, or equipment parts if possible.
For large or critical orders, do not skip this step.
Final Advice
When ordering fasteners from China with only samples, the safest process is simple: identify the part, measure it, confirm material and grade, define coating, create a drawing, approve a sample, then start production.
A sample can begin the discussion. A clear specification protects the order.