posted 9 years ago
I screwed together most of the parts of a roundwood wall today. I found both GRK 'RSS' and Fastenmaster 'Timberlok' screws at home depot, and bought some of each to see how they compared for this use.
Performance was noticeably different, so I thought I'd share the results.
Head style:
Timberlok: socket drive with fairly narrow head
RSS: Star drive with larger head
I preferred the socket drive on the Timberloks, mostly because I don't ever need a star drive for anything else. If you get the retail packaged screws, both brands include a driver bit.
OTOH, I preferred the larger head on the RSS; the Timberloks strike me as too easy to drive overly far through the wood, which leaves me worried about pull-through. After a test drive, I used washers with the timberloks, but not the RSS.
Dimensions, Strength:
Timberlok screws all share a shaft diameter of 0.189" and minor/major thread diameter of 0.172/0.260.
RSS screws come in a variety of thicknesses scaling with their length; 6" are available as 5/16s or 3/8s, 8" only in 3/8s. The 5/16s is a hair thicker(and stronger) than the Timberlok spec; the 3/8s is quite noticeably so. Going by their site they have sizes up to 3/8x20"!
Function:
I bought 8" timberloks, along with 5/16x6" and 3/8x8" RSS. I drove all into green doug fir. No predrilling was needed.
Timberloks were easier to drive, though a bit harder to start. My cordless impact driver running an 18v 2ah battery could handle them fine unless I hit a knot, and it was easy to do with one hand aside from starting them. The relatively short amount of thread made them well suited for pulling the components together; in some cases the RSS screws could not do so because of the threading present in the beam.
However, at some spots where I wanted to pull two pieces tight by screwing through side-grain into end-grain, 8" timberloks would pull out or strip the end grain portion.
Switching to an 8" RSS screw for the same task solved the issue in each case. I had to use a cordless drill for the RSS screws; with a 4-ah battery it could just barely handle them, and it was near the limits of a one-handed operation for me. It wouldn't reliably drive these with a 2ah battery, not able to draw enough juice.
I'll add a picture when I remember to bring the camera up.
I've seen timberloks used on several projects, but never RSS screws before. I ended up pleased to have both, and figure I'll continue using a mix when I need this sort of fastener.
I'm hoping to track down some SPAX structural screws to see how those compare, and some suitable wood for pegs for future projects.
What sort of fasteners do you prefer?
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