A wood screw will have a courser type thread and will have a sharper point.
to screw to pieces of wood together>.<
A screw holds wood together better than a nail because the threading of a screw provides a horizontal grip on the wood. Nails are driven down into wood and have nothing but the pressure of the wood to keep them attached, which means it is easier to pull a nail straight out of a board than a screw.
The thread pattern of the screw anchors it in the wood. You not only have to pull against frictio, but also against the natural strength of the fibre and wood itself.
A countersunk screw is one which hides the head below the surface of the wood or material. This provides a smooth surface after the screw is driven in.
to counter sink the screw means the screw head should lay under the wood surface-- the head should not stick up past the surface of the wood to do this I use my drill with a Phillips head bit and bore a hole in the wood while swirling my wrist and pushing down to widen the hole a bit-- this makes the head hole a bit larger and allows the screw head to sink below the wood surface without creating any wood splintering around the top of the hole by over forcing the screw
to screw to pieces of wood together>.<
Just exactly the same way you screw into wood.
Since tree trunks are made of wood, you can put a wood screw into them if you wish. It is always easier to screw in a screw if you drill a guide hole first.
A screw holds wood together better than a nail because the threading of a screw provides a horizontal grip on the wood. Nails are driven down into wood and have nothing but the pressure of the wood to keep them attached, which means it is easier to pull a nail straight out of a board than a screw.
It is not a good practice, but people do it. Some will tap a screw with a hammer to start a hole. Others will drive it all the way in. That is bad for the screw and the wood.Hammering a screw is counter-productive and will not have good results:When you hammer a nail into wood, the sides of the nail compress the wood. The compressed wood wants to expand pressing on the sides of the nail. The pressure keeps the nail in place preventing it from coming out of the wood.When you hammer a screw into wood, the threads of the screw "chew out" the wood pressing it downward, possibly compressing it in a downward direction, leaving little or no wood to hold the screw in place The compressed wood, wanting to expand may tend to expand upwards pushing the screw out.
don't know what you mean by step by step process, but I can say with confidence that a screw will almost always hold better.
you would have enough wood to screw an entire village! you would have enough wood to screw an entire village!
A screw driver is used to screw, screws into wood it is a very useful tool.
The thread pattern of the screw anchors it in the wood. You not only have to pull against frictio, but also against the natural strength of the fibre and wood itself.
it can fix wood, doors and all other bits of wood
by makin a new hole
no. to insert a nail into say... a piece of wood, youd use a hammmer. to insert a screw into a piece of wood, youd a screwdriver, wrench, etc.