and type B (blunt) tip Self-tapping screws have a wide range of tip and thread patterns, and are available with almost any possible
screw head design. Common features are the screw thread covering the whole length of the screw from tip to head and a pronounced thread hard enough for the intended
substrate, often
case-hardened. For hard substrates such as metal or hard plastics, the self-tapping ability is often created by cutting a gap in the continuity of the thread on the screw, generating a
flute and cutting edge similar to those on a
tap. Thus, whereas a regular
machine screw cannot tap its own hole in a metal substrate, a self-tapping one can (within reasonable limits of substrate
hardness and depth). For softer substrates such as wood or soft plastics, the self-tapping ability can come simply from a tip that tapers to a gimlet point (in which no flute is needed). Like the tip of a
nail or
gimlet, such a point forms the hole by displacement of the surrounding material rather than any
chip-forming drilling/cutting/evacuating action. Not all self-tapping screws have a sharp tip. The
type B tip is blunt and intended for use with a
pilot hole, often in sheet materials. The lack of a sharp tip is helpful for packaging and handling and in some applications may be helpful for reducing the clearance necessary on the reverse of a fastened panel or for making more thread available on a given length screw. == Thread-forming vs. thread-cutting ==