Marine fasteners are selected for more than basic size. Salt water, humidity, vibration, and maintenance access all affect whether a stainless steel bolt and nut assembly performs well over time.
For buyers, the most common mistake is ordering “stainless bolts and nuts” without confirming the grade, thread, pitch, length, washer, and working environment.
Why Marine Fastener Size Matters
Size Controls Fit, Load and Service Life
A marine fastener must fit the hole, provide enough thread engagement, and support the required clamp load. If the bolt is too short, the nut may not fully engage. If it is too long, exposed threads may collect salt and dirt.
For common marine bolt options, buyers can review bolt products and confirm the correct standard before ordering.
Common Metric Sizes for Marine Stainless Bolts
Practical Size Reference
| Metric Size | Common Coarse Pitch | Typical Marine Use |
|---|---|---|
| M6 | 1.0 mm | Light panels, covers, small brackets |
| M8 | 1.25 mm | Rail fittings, deck hardware, equipment covers |
| M10 | 1.5 mm | Medium brackets, supports, frames |
| M12 | 1.75 mm | Machinery bases, structural supports |
| M16 | 2.0 mm | Heavy brackets, dock hardware, marine frames |
| M20 | 2.5 mm | Large supports and foundation-related assemblies |
| M24 | 3.0 mm | Heavy-duty marine structures and equipment bases |
This chart is only a starting point. Final sizing should follow the drawing, load requirement, and installation condition.
For standard metric fasteners, review standard fasteners.
Stainless Steel Grade Selection
A2 vs A4 in Marine Use
A2 stainless steel is common for general corrosion resistance. A4 stainless steel, often associated with 316 stainless steel, is usually preferred for marine or chloride exposure.
Buyers can review stainless steel fasteners when selecting 304, 316, A2, or A4 fasteners.
Do not assume stainless steel always means high strength. Confirm the property class, such as A2-70 or A4-80, when load matters.
Bolt and Nut Matching
Threads Must Match Exactly
A stainless bolt and nut must match in diameter, pitch, and thread system. Metric coarse, metric fine, UNC, and UNF threads are not interchangeable.
Confirm:
- Bolt size and length
- Thread pitch or TPI
- Full thread or partial thread
- Nut grade and material
- Washer size and material
- Anti-seize or lubrication requirement
- Galling risk during assembly
For washer selection, check washer products.
Coating and Surface Notes
Stainless Usually Does Not Need Zinc Coating
Marine stainless fasteners usually rely on the stainless material itself for corrosion resistance. However, passivation, surface cleaning, or anti-galling lubrication may still be required.
For non-stainless coated options, compare various coated fasteners.
Final RFQ Checklist
A complete marine fastener RFQ should include:
| RFQ Item | What to Specify |
|---|---|
| Product type | Bolt, nut, washer, stud, screw |
| Size | Diameter, length, pitch |
| Material | 304, 316, A2, A4 |
| Property class | A2-70, A4-70, A4-80, or project grade |
| Estándar | ISO, DIN, ASTM, ASME, or drawing |
| Aplicación | Deck, dock, vessel, offshore, equipment |
| Documents | MTC, inspection report, traceability |
For special dimensions or drawing-based marine parts, use custom non-standard fasteners.
Final Advice
Marine stainless steel bolts and nuts should be selected by size, grade, thread, load, corrosion exposure, and assembly method. A clear RFQ prevents thread mismatch, weak assemblies, galling, and early corrosion problems.