M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038) is the m20-thread variant of Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038) manufactured to GB/T 73 / ISO 4766. This page focuses on the data engineers reach for at the bench: dimensional values for the M20 size, the spanner/drive that fits, and the assembly data you need to install it.
M20 Dimensional Row (GB/T 73 / ISO 4766)
| Size | Pitch (mm) | Length L (mm) | Hex socket s (mm) | Engagement depth t min (mm) | Point diameter dp (mm) | Reference standard |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| M20 | 2.5 | 30 | 10.0 | 10.0 | 15.0 | ISO 4026-4029 / GB/T 77-79 |
Spanner & Drive for M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038)
The hex socket for M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038) is shown in the spec table — use the matching Allen / hex key (an ISO 2936 hex key set covers the full range). A T-handle Allen key gives the best feel for setting preload by feel; for production work use a torque-controlled driver.
Hole Sizes for M20
| Coarse-thread pitch (ISO 724) | 2.5 mm |
|---|---|
| Through-hole / clearance (ISO 273 medium) | 22 mm |
| Tapping drill, coarse thread | 17.5 mm |
Tightening Torque for M20
| Class 8.8 (dry, ~µ 0.125) | ≈ 410 Nm |
|---|---|
| Class 10.9 (dry, ~µ 0.125) | ≈ 580 Nm |
| Class 12.9 (dry, ~µ 0.125) | ≈ 690 Nm |
Indicative dry-joint values. Lubrication can lower the required torque by 15–25%. Always confirm against the joint design, especially when going up a strength class.
Common Applications for M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038)
M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038) are commonly specified for heavy assembly and large machine mounts.
Installation Tips for M20 Slotted Flat Point Set Screw — GB/T 73 / ISO 4766 (Series 038)
- Use a quality Allen key fully seated in the socket — partial engagement is the most common cause of stripped sockets at this size.
- For countersunk and button-head variants, chamfer the through-hole to seat the head flush without preloading the head/shank fillet.
- At M20 the stretch in the bolt becomes the controlling factor — for critical joints, use angle-controlled or stretch-controlled tightening instead of pure torque.
When to Step Up or Down from M20
When the joint preload approaches the proof load of M20 class 8.8, step up to M24 class 8.8 (or move to M20 class 10.9). When the joint is over-specified, M16 often saves weight and cost without losing the safety margin.
