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The Kreg SPS-F075-100 is a #6 x 3/4 inch face frame and pocket-hole screw built for 3/4 inch hardwood joinery. Fine thread, a Type 17 Auger point, and a modified pan head combine to pull thin stock together cleanly without splitting the stile or leaving a proud head at the joint.
At 3/4 inch, this screw is sized for pocket-hole joints in 3/4 inch face frame stock — the standard thickness for hardwood rails and stiles in North American cabinet construction. The length keeps the tip well inside the joint without blowing through the back face of a narrow stile. It is also the right call when attaching a face frame to a cabinet box where the combined panel and face frame depth does not leave room for a longer fastener. For 1/2 inch plywood backs or thin dividers that need face frame attachment, this length also avoids over-penetration that can telegraph through a finished surface.
Hardwood face frames demand a fine thread. Coarse threads can strip out in tight-grained maple or oak before the joint fully closes, while fine threads engage more material per inch of shank and resist pull-out under the racking forces a cabinet door applies over time. The Type 17 Auger point complements that by clearing material at the tip rather than wedging it aside, which keeps splitting risk low even when driving near the end grain of a stile. Together, the two features let a pocket-hole joint close cleanly without a pilot hole in most hardwood face frame applications.
Cabinet shops building hardwood face frames in maple, oak, cherry, or walnut will use this length most often — it covers the majority of rail-to-stile pocket joints in standard 3/4 inch stock without needing to switch boxes. Finish carpenters attaching pre-built face frames to cabinet boxes also rely on the 3/4 inch length when the combined stock is shallow. For homeowners tackling a single cabinet build or a small run of doors, the 100-piece count is practical: enough to finish a full kitchen face frame without a large leftover inventory. This screw is for dry interior work only — the zinc finish is not rated for exterior or high-humidity environments.
Fine thread is the correct choice for hardwood face frames. Coarse thread can strip out in dense species like maple and oak before the joint closes fully. Fine thread engages more material per inch of shank, which improves holding power in tight-grained hardwoods.
The screw is designed for angled pocket bores. While a pocket-hole jig is the most common way to cut that bore, the jig is not strictly required as long as the angled pocket is cut to the correct geometry for 3/4 inch stock.
No. The modified pan head is designed to bear flat against the pocket wall, not countersink into it. A standard pocket-hole bore positions the head correctly without any additional prep.
It will function in softwood and plywood, but a coarse thread pocket-hole screw provides better pull-out resistance in those lower-density materials. Fine thread is optimized for hardwood species.
No. The zinc finish is rated for dry interior use. For exterior or high-humidity applications, a screw with a more robust corrosion-resistant coating is needed.
Choosing the correct length for the stock thickness is the single most important decision in face frame fastening, and the 3/4 inch screw closes that decision for standard hardwood rails and stiles — leaving the joint tight, the tip contained, and the face frame ready for finishing.
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