A button head self-drilling screw (also called a mushroom head or dome head self-drilling screw) is a threaded fastener that combines a rounded, low-profile head with a hardened steel tip that is geometrically machined to act as both drill bit and tap simultaneously. Unlike conventional wood or machine screws that require a pre-drilled pilot hole, the self-drilling tip penetrates sheet metal, purlins, and light structural steel under rotational force alone, cutting its own flute path before the thread engages.
The "button" or rounded cap of the head stands roughly 2–3 mm proud of the substrate surface once seated. This low elevation reduces snag hazards on rooftops, limits wind-driven water ingress beneath the head, and gives a cleaner aesthetic on exposed cladding panels compared with hex-head variants. The wide-diameter bearing surface — often 1.5× to 2× the shank diameter — spreads compressive load over a larger area, reducing the risk of countersinking into thin-gauge material.
The button head profile is defined by a spherical or semi-elliptical crown with a flat underside (bearing face). The critical engineering parameter is the head-to-shank diameter ratio. For standard M4.8 and M5.5 roofing variants, the head diameter typically spans 9.5–11.0 mm against a shank of 4.8–5.5 mm, yielding a ratio of approximately 1.9:1 to 2.0:1. This ratio is carefully balanced: too large a head increases the risk of corrosion pooling; too narrow reduces the pull-through resistance threshold.
The underside of the button head may incorporate a serrated or knurled ring in premium variants. This feature bites into the substrate coating under tightening torque, providing measurable resistance to rotational loosening — a valuable characteristic where cyclic wind loading induces vibration fatigue on roofing panels over a 25–30 year service life.
Most button head self-drilling screws accept a Phillips #2 (PH2) or Pozidriv #2 (PZ2) driver bit. Phillips cross recesses are manufactured to ISO 8764 / DIN 5008, ensuring cross-compatibility with standard power-driver bits used in roofing. Pozidriv recesses offer improved cam-out resistance at higher torque settings. Some specialist variants feature a square drive (Robertson) or TORX® T25 interface for even higher torque transfer with reduced operator fatigue.
The self-drilling tip — often referred to as a TEK point (a generic trade term now widely used as a descriptor) — is the defining feature that eliminates pre-drilling labor. TEK points are classified from #1 through #5 based on drilling capacity:
Matching the correct TEK point to the substrate is critical. Driving a TEK #1 into 4 mm steel will cause the drill point to overheat, work-harden, and snap before the thread engages. Conversely, using a TEK #5 on 0.5 mm sheet metal causes over-drilling and thread strip-out. Roofing panel applications with standard 1.5–2.0 mm galvanized steel purlins typically specify TEK #2 or TEK #3.
Understanding the protective system applied to a button head self-drilling screw is essential for specifying the correct fastener for the intended environmental exposure category.
Most self-drilling screws for roofing applications are manufactured from medium carbon steel (0.3–0.5% C) or low-alloy steel to enable the heat treatment required for drill-point hardness. AISI/SAE 1022 or equivalent grades are common. The carbon content must be controlled tightly: too low and the tip cannot achieve adequate hardness; too high and the core becomes brittle, risking shank fracture under reverse-torque removal.
The standard galvanized finish applied to button head self-drilling screws is electrodeposition zinc plating per ISO 4042 (formerly DIN 267 Part 9), with a minimum coating thickness of 5–8 µm on threads. This zinc layer provides sacrificial cathodic protection: when base steel is exposed at a thread cut or mechanical damage point, the surrounding zinc corrodes preferentially, preventing rust propagation into the steel substrate.
For higher corrosion resistance requirements — such as coastal environments with salt spray exposure exceeding 500 hours per ISO 9227 — an additional chromate passivation treatment (trivalent or hexavalent-free in REACH-compliant products) is applied over the zinc layer to seal micropores and extend protection.
The secondary layer — a phosphate conversion coating — serves multiple functions that are often underappreciated in fastener specifications. Applied by immersion in a phosphoric acid solution containing manganese or zinc cations, the process creates a microcrystalline layer of metal phosphate (hopeite or phosphophyllite) directly bonded to the steel surface:
The phosphate microcrystal structure retains oils and lubricants in its porous surface, significantly reducing thread-engagement torque by 15–30%. This translates to faster installation, reduced driver-bit wear, and lower risk of screw head cam-out during high-speed driving.
While thinner than zinc plating, phosphate coatings provide an additional chemical barrier against moisture ingress, especially when combined with a wax or oil seal over the phosphate layer. The dual galvanized + phosphated system extends salt-spray test performance beyond that of either layer alone.
Phosphate surfaces offer superior adhesion for paint primers and sealant compounds. In colour-coated roofing assemblies, this allows the screw head to be overcoated to match panel colour, maintaining aesthetic continuity on visible fixing locations.
The phosphate layer improves torque-tension predictability during automated installation. This is critical for quality-controlled preassembly lines in modular building systems where over- or under-tightening can cause immediate structural rejection.
The following table covers standard dimensions for button head self-drilling screws used in metal roofing applications. Custom lengths and diameters are available for project-specific requirements. Contact Tuyue's technical team for bespoke specification support.
Installation torque for a button head self-drilling screw is governed by three sequential phases: (1) the drilling phase, during which the tip penetrates the substrate — this demands the highest rotational speed, typically 1,500–2,500 RPM; (2) the thread-forming phase, where the helix cuts into the parent material; and (3) the seating phase, where the head bears down on the substrate surface. Over-torquing during the seating phase strips the thread groove in the metal substrate, reducing pull-out strength by up to 60%.
Recommended installation torque for M4.8 × 25 mm in 1.5 mm galvanized purlin: 3.5–4.5 N·m. Use of a torque-limiting driver clutch set to the correct value is strongly recommended for production roofing installation.
Pull-out strength (axial resistance to disengagement from the threaded substrate) and pull-through strength (resistance to the head passing through the panel material) are the two primary structural performance metrics. For a standard 4.8 × 38 mm button head screw in 1.5 mm G550 galvanized steel: