Inch nut sizing often causes confusion in international purchasing. A buyer may request “1/2 inch nuts,” but that is not enough. The nut may be 1/2-13 UNC or 1/2-20 UNF. Both are 1/2 inch nominal size, but they are not compatible.
For safe ordering, inch nut specifications must include diameter, threads per inch, thread series, material, grade, finish, and matching bolt requirement.
How Inch Nut Sizes Are Written
Diameter, TPI and Thread Series
Inch nuts are usually identified by nominal diameter and threads per inch, known as TPI.
| Nut Size | Thread Series | Meaning |
|---|---|---|
| 1/4-20 UNC | Coarse | 1/4 inch diameter, 20 threads per inch |
| 1/4-28 UNF | Fine | 1/4 inch diameter, 28 threads per inch |
| 1/2-13 UNC | Coarse | 1/2 inch diameter, 13 threads per inch |
| 1/2-20 UNF | Fine | 1/2 inch diameter, 20 threads per inch |
| 3/4-10 UNC | Coarse | 3/4 inch diameter, 10 threads per inch |
| 3/4-16 UNF | Fine | 3/4 inch diameter, 16 threads per inch |
Buyers can review common standard fasteners before confirming inch nut requirements.
UNC vs UNF Nuts
Coarse and Fine Thread Differences
UNC means Unified National Coarse. UNF means Unified National Fine.
| Предмет | UNC Nuts | UNF Nuts |
|---|---|---|
| Thread pitch | Coarser | Finer |
| Assembly speed | Faster | Slower |
| Dirt tolerance | Better | Lower |
| Adjustment accuracy | Lower | Better |
| Common use | General machinery, construction, repair | Automotive, equipment, precision joints |
| Main risk | Lower fine adjustment | Easier to cross-thread if mishandled |
UNC nuts are common for general industrial use. UNF nuts are often used where tighter adjustment, vibration control, or limited thread engagement is important.
Thread Compatibility Rules
Diameter Alone Does Not Decide Fit
A UNC bolt cannot correctly assemble with a UNF nut of the same diameter. The thread series and TPI must match.
Before ordering, confirm:
- Nominal diameter
- TPI
- UNC, UNF, or special thread
- Thread class if specified
- Nut grade
- Bolt or stud grade
- Coating and thread fit
For high-load assemblies, review high-strength fasteners and confirm the bolt-nut combination as a system.
Coating and Material Considerations
Surface finish can affect thread assembly. Zinc plating, hot-dip galvanizing, black oxide, zinc flake, and stainless steel all behave differently.
For coated nuts, check nut run-down after finishing. This is especially important for hot-dip galvanized inch nuts. Buyers can compare various coated fasteners before confirming the finish.
For corrosion-resistant applications, review stainless steel fasteners.
RFQ Checklist for Inch Nuts
A complete RFQ should include:
| RFQ Item | What to Specify |
|---|---|
| Nut type | Hex, heavy hex, flange, lock, coupling |
| Size | Diameter and TPI |
| Thread series | UNC, UNF, UNEF, or custom |
| Стандарт | ASME, ASTM, SAE, or drawing |
| Материал | Carbon steel, alloy steel, stainless steel |
| Grade | SAE, ASTM, or project grade |
| Finish | Plain, zinc, HDG, black, zinc flake |
| Matching part | Bolt, stud, washer, or assembly set |
For non-standard threads or special nut forms, use custom non-standard fasteners and provide drawings.
Final Advice
Inch nut compatibility depends on more than nominal diameter. Buyers must confirm TPI, thread series, grade, coating, and matching bolt or stud before placing an order.
For broader sourcing, review the full fastener products range and build the RFQ with complete thread data.