The cross-shaped recessed drive system was commercialized in the 1930s by Henry F. Phillips, who purchased the patent from its inventor John P. Thompson and brought it to mass production. The genius of the design was not merely aesthetics — it was a mechanical solution to an industrial bottleneck: keeping a power-tool bit centered on the screw head at high RPM, without requiring a perfectly steady hand.
At the core of the Phillips philosophy is controlled cam-out. Unlike a slotted drive, which can strip material catastrophically when over-torqued, the Phillips recess is engineered to disengage the bit at a defined axial load threshold — effectively acting as a mechanical clutch that protects both the workpiece and the fastener. This property made it ideal for early assembly lines and remains highly valued in modern drywall construction where consistent embedment depth is critical.
Today the Phillips drive is codified in multiple international standards — including ISO 8764-1 (drive bits), ANSI B18.6.3 (machine screws), and DIN 7985 (pan head variants) — making it a truly universal system that procurement engineers worldwide can specify with confidence.
Thread pitch is arguably the most consequential specification choice when selecting a drywall screw, yet it is frequently overlooked. The two dominant categories — coarse thread (also labeled "W" thread or "bugle" thread) and fine thread ("S" thread or "metal" thread) — serve fundamentally different substrates.
Coarse thread screws feature a wide pitch — typically between 6 and 9 threads per inch (TPI) for standard drywall sizes — with a sharper thread angle designed to grip the fibrous cell structure of wood. This geometry creates an aggressive mechanical interlock: as the screw advances, the thread displaces rather than cuts gypsum and wood, compressing the surrounding material and producing very high pull-out values in timber framing (typically 75–120 lbf for a 1-5/8" #6 screw in SPF lumber).
Coarse thread screws are the correct specification when the substrate framing is wood (softwood or hardwood studs). They are the standard product in residential drywall applications across North America, Australia, and much of Europe.
Fine thread (S-type) screws carry a tighter pitch — typically 18–20 TPI — designed to cut cleanly through the harder surface of cold-formed steel framing (CFSF). In steel studs, the fine thread creates chips that are expelled ahead of the screw, maintaining consistent engagement without seizing. Attempting to use coarse thread in steel can cause the screw to gall and strip.
The surface coating on a drywall screw is not cosmetic. It determines corrosion resistance, friction characteristics, paint adhesion, and the screw's suitability for different environmental exposure classes. Tuyue's Cross Bulge Head Drywall Screws use a black phosphate (manganese phosphate) conversion coating — the industry standard for interior drywall applications.
The phosphating process involves immersing steel screws in a hot manganese phosphate solution, which reacts with the iron surface to create a tightly adherent crystalline layer of iron-manganese phosphate. The resulting layer is typically 8–15 micrometers thick, micro-porous, and saturated with oil or wax during a post-treatment step. Key performance characteristics include:
For exterior or high-humidity applications, Tuyue also manufactures stainless steel fasteners and zinc-plated variants that provide superior environmental resistance.
The Phillips drive's most discussed characteristic — and the source of much field frustration — is cam-out: the tendency of a driving bit to ride up and out of the recess under excess torque. Understanding this behavior requires examining the mechanics of the recess geometry.
The Phillips recess is defined by four wings arranged at 90° intervals, with each wing having tapered walls (flanks) at approximately 26.5° from vertical in the PH2 specification. This taper is what enables cam-out: at a critical axial load, the force vector components against the tapered flank exceed the friction force, and the bit ejects. This is, paradoxically, a feature — it prevents overtightening that would break screws or puncture gypsum paper.
In practice, cam-out is controlled through a combination of:
Bit fit quality: Using a new, correctly sized PH2 bit with full engagement in all four wings is the single most impactful variable. A worn bit has reduced contact area, lowering the cam-out threshold below the fastener's design torque. Replace bits every 500–1,000 screws in production environments.
Drill speed and axial pressure: Higher axial pressure (pushing the tool into the screw) raises the friction component and delays cam-out. Variable-speed drills set to 400–600 RPM with firm downward pressure outperform high-speed drives with light touch.
Drive depth management: Drywall screw guns with adjustable clutches disengage at a preset depth, eliminating the need to manually modulate torque — and avoiding the over-drive that most often triggers unwanted cam-out.
Phillips Drive drywall screws are available in a wide matrix of diameters and lengths. Correct sizing is determined by the combined thickness of gypsum board layers plus the required embedment depth into the framing member (minimum 5/8" engagement into wood is the general code requirement in North American residential construction).
Tuyue's Cross Bulge Head Drywall Screws are available in a comprehensive size range, covering all standard drywall thicknesses and most specialty applications. Consult the product page or contact our team for custom lengths or coatings.
Tuyue supplies OEM quantities with flexible specifications — diameter, length, coating, and thread type all configurable.
Request a Quote →Even the highest-quality Phillips Drive screw will underperform if improperly driven. The following best practices reflect guidance aligned with ASTM C840 (Application and Finishing of Gypsum Board) and professional installer standards.
Use a dedicated drywall screw gun with a magnetic PH2 bit holder and adjustable depth-stop clutch rather than a general-purpose impact driver. The clutch disengages drive torque the instant the screw head reaches the set depth, consistently achieving the "dimple-without-breaking-paper" embedment that codes require. Impact drivers, while effective for wood screws, apply intermittent shock torque that can over-drive drywall screws or fatigue the phosphate coating.
For single-layer 1/2" residential drywall on ceilings, ASTM C840 specifies fasteners no more than 7 inches on center along framing. On walls, 8-inch spacing at field and 8-inch at edges is the minimum; 12-inch field and 8-inch edge is the typical production pattern. Double-layer applications require closer spacing on the base layer to prevent telegraphing.
The screw head must be driven just below the paper surface — creating a shallow, clean dimple — without breaking the paper facing. A broken paper eliminates the mechanical interlock between the paper and gypsum core at that point, reducing holding power and creating a "blow-out" that telegraphs through finish coats. Adjust the screw gun's depth stop until dimples are consistent before committing to production runs.
While drywall installation is the primary use case for Phillips Drive coarse-thread screws, their versatility extends well beyond gypsum boards. The combination of aggressive coarse thread, flat countersunk head, and Phillips drive makes them an effective multipurpose interior fastener.
Standard 1/2" and 5/8" gypsum board installation on wood stud framing. The flat countersunk head sits flush for seamless joint taping and mudding. The coarse thread provides strong mechanical bond to SPF (spruce-pine-fir) or Douglas fir studs. See Tuyue's Cross Bulge Head Drywall Screws for the complete specification.
Coarse-thread Phillips screws are effective for attaching OSB or plywood sheathing to wood framing where the screw won't be exposed to weather. The flat head can be used in countersunk applications for smooth surface overlay. For heavy structural work, Tuyue's construction wood screws provide additional shear resistance.
Shorter lengths (3/4"–1-1/4") in #4 or #6 gauge work for thin material attachment — backing panels, interior trim, cabinet backs — where a small flush head profile is needed. Pre-drilling in hardwoods is recommended to prevent splitting.
Some composite panel manufacturers specify coarse-thread Phillips screws with a modified Type 17 cutting tip for cleaner entry into fiber-cement. For more demanding composite applications, see Tuyue's Flat Head Wood Construction Screws with Type 17 cutting.
Browse the full fastener range from Tuyue to find the right screw for every substrate and application:
Zhejiang Jiaxing Tuyue Import and Export Company Limited is a Jiaxing-based precision fastener manufacturer and global exporter with deep specialization in construction and industrial fasteners. Tuyue's Cross Bulge Head Drywall Screws represent the culmination of strict raw material sourcing, precision thread rolling, and controlled phosphating lines.
Every batch of Tuyue drywall screws is manufactured from medium-carbon steel wire (equivalent to SAE 1022 or 10B21 with boron additions for hardenability), then thread-rolled (not cut) for superior fatigue resistance and surface finish. The thread rolling process cold-works the steel grain structure along the thread helix, increasing tensile strength in the thread root by up to 30% versus machined threads.
Post-rolling, screws undergo induction or belt-furnace case hardening to achieve a surface hardness of Rockwell C45–55 at the tip and thread flanks, with a tougher core (HRC 32–38) to resist shear during over-drive. Heat treatment parameters are validated against ASTM F1941 and equivalent standards.
Headquartered in Jiaxing, Zhejiang — a hub for Chinese fastener manufacturing — Tuyue maintains established logistics networks to North America, Europe, Southeast Asia, and the Middle East. As a full-scope one-stop fastener supplier, Tuyue consolidates drywall screws, roofing screws, wood screws, blind rivets, stainless hardware, and oilless bearings under a single export relationship, simplifying procurement for distributors and contractors.