Coating selection is rarely just about rust. In real assemblies, the coating also affects friction, torque, thread fit, galling, and how well the joint holds preload under vibration.
I have seen buyers choose a strong bolt with the wrong finish and still get field problems. The bolt was not weak. The joint simply lost clamp load, corroded under the washer, or seized during installation.
The right coating starts with two questions: what environment will the fastener face, and how will the joint be tightened?
Start With the Service Condition
Do not select coatings by habit. Select them by exposure.
| État | Risque principal | Practical Coating Direction |
|---|---|---|
| Dry indoor equipment | Light oxidation | Zinc plating, black oxide with oil, phosphate |
| Travaux extérieurs | Pluie et humidité | Hot-dip galvanizing, zinc flake, suitable zinc systems |
| Coastal or marine-adjacent use | Corrosion des chlorures | 316 stainless, zinc flake, PTFE-type systems, project-approved coating |
| Heavy vibration | Preload loss, fretting | Coating with controlled friction plus locking design |
| Boulons à haute résistance | Embrittlement risk after plating | Avoid uncontrolled electroplating; confirm baking and standards |
| Assemblages inox | Galling and thread seizure | Passivation, lubrication, anti-seize, or compatible coating |
For general product comparison, buyers can review available produits de fixation before narrowing the coating requirement.
Corrosion Protection Comes First
Placage de zinc
Zinc plating is common, economical, and clean-looking. It suits indoor machinery, cabinets, brackets, and light-duty assemblies.
But it is not the first choice for wet outdoor work or coastal service. For high-strength fasteners, electroplating must be controlled because hydrogen embrittlement can become a concern.
Common references may include ISO 4042 or ASTM F1941/F1941M, depending on the market and order specification.
Galvanisation à chaud
Hot-dip galvanizing gives heavier zinc coverage. It is often used for steel structures, transmission towers, guardrails, and outdoor construction hardware.
The tradeoff is thread fit. Hot-dip galvanized bolts often need compatible oversize tapped nuts. If this is ignored, the installer may fight every nut on site.
For metric projects, ISO 10684 may apply. For inch or ASTM-based work, ASTM F2329/F2329M is often referenced.
Revêtements de type flocons de zinc et Dacromet
Zinc flake coatings are widely used where corrosion resistance and controlled thickness are both important. They are often considered for automotive, machinery, wind energy, and exposed industrial assemblies.
These coatings can also provide more controlled friction when supplied with a specified topcoat. That matters when torque consistency is part of the installation process.
For coating options, see attaches enduites.
Vibration Resistance Is Not Only a Coating Issue
This is where buyers need to be careful. A coating does not automatically make a fastener vibration-proof.
Vibration resistance depends on clamp load, joint stiffness, thread engagement, washer selection, surface condition, and locking method. Coating helps by controlling corrosion and friction, but it does not replace good joint design.
What Coatings Can Help With
A suitable coating can:
- Reduce corrosion under the head and washer.
- Improve consistency of tightening friction.
- Limit thread seizure.
- Protect against fretting-related corrosion.
- Support repeatable torque-tension performance when tested.
What Coatings Cannot Fix
A coating cannot fix:
- Too little thread engagement.
- Wrong bolt length.
- Soft joint material embedding under load.
- Poor washer selection.
- Incorrect torque.
- Severe vibration without locking design.
For standard bolt, nut, and washer combinations, attaches standards should still be checked as an assembly, not as separate loose parts.
Friction and Torque Must Be Confirmed
A coated fastener may tighten very differently from a plain one.
Dry zinc plating, waxed zinc flake, PTFE coating, black oxide with oil, and hot-dip galvanizing all create different friction behavior. If the same torque value is used blindly, the final clamp load can be too high or too low.
Points de contrôle de l'acheteur
Before approving a coating for vibration-sensitive work, confirm:
- Is the torque value based on dry, oiled, or coated condition?
- Is a topcoat or lubricant included?
- Is torque-tension testing required?
- Will bolts, nuts, and washers be supplied as matched sets?
- Are threads inspected after coating?
- Is the coating allowed by the project standard?
For metric standards and substitutions, this Guide des normes de fixation DIN et ISO is useful when checking drawing requirements.
Material Still Matters
Coating is not a substitute for the correct base material.
Carbon steel with a proper coating may be practical for outdoor structures. Stainless steel may be better for washdown, food equipment, or coastal exposure. Alloy steel may be needed for high strength, but coating and hydrogen embrittlement controls become more important.
Buyers reviewing attaches en acier au carbone should define grade, coating, and post-treatment requirements together.
Liste de contrôle de la demande de prix pour les fixations enduites
Une demande de prix claire doit inclure :
- Environnement applicatif.
- Vibration level or load condition.
- Fastener standard, size, and grade.
- Base material.
- Coating type and color.
- Épaisseur du revêtement ou exigence de performance.
- Salt spray requirement, if specified.
- Lubrication or topcoat requirement.
- Torque-tension testing, if needed.
- Compatibilité écrou et rondelle.
- Packing method to protect the coating.
Conseil final
Choose fastener coatings by function, not appearance. For corrosion, match the coating to the exposure. For vibration, focus on preload control, friction consistency, and joint design.
The best results come when the coating, bolt grade, nut, washer, torque method, and packing plan are specified together. Buyers can contacter XZ Fastener with the size list, service environment, vibration condition, finish requirement, quantity, and inspection documents for a practical coating review.