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Nuts
Acorn Cap Nuts Cage Nuts
Acorn Cap Nuts
Cage Nuts
Coupling Nuts Hex Nuts
Coupling Nuts
Hex Nuts
Lock Nuts Nylon Insert Lock Nuts
Lock Nuts
Nylon Insert Lock Nuts
Panel Nuts Pipe Plugs
Panel Nuts
Nuts - Pipe Plugs
Spring Nuts Square Nuts
Spring Nuts
Square Nuts
Structural Nuts T-Nuts
Structural Nuts
T-Nuts
U Clips Weld Nuts
Nuts - U Clips
Weld Nuts
Wheel Nuts Wing Nuts
Wheel Nuts
Wing Nuts
Nuts are almost always used opposite a mating bolt to fasten a stack of parts together. The two partners are kept together by a combination of their threads' friction, a slight stretch of the bolt, and compression of the parts. In applications where vibration or rotation may work a nut loose, various locking mechanisms may be employed: Adhesives, safety pins or lockwire, nylon inserts, or slightly oval-shaped threads. The most common shape is hexagonal, for similar reasons as the bolt head - 6 sides give a good granularity of angles for a tool to approach from (good in tight spots), but more (and smaller) corners would be vulnerable to being rounded off. Other specialized shapes exist for certain needs, such as wing nuts for finger adjustment and captive nuts for inaccessible areas.

Nuts are graded with strength ratings compatible with their respective bolts; for example, an ISO property class 10 nut will be able to support the bolt proof strength load of an ISO property class 10.9 bolt without stripping. Likewise, an SAE class 5 nut can support the proof load of an SAE class 5 bolt, and so on. The proof strength of the most common property classes is listed at bolted joint.