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The Kreg SPS-F075-500 is a #6 x 3/4-inch modified pan head face frame and pocket-hole screw built for joints where stock thickness is limited and a compact screw keeps the fastener from breaking through the back face. Fine thread, a Type 17 Auger point, and a #2 square drive combine to give hardwood and dense-material joints a clean, tight pull without splitting.
At 3/4 inch, this screw is sized for situations where stock thickness, not joint depth, dictates the fastener. Face frames built from 1/2-inch or thinner hardwood, thin drawer-box components, and overlay joints where the pocket exits close to a finished face all need a screw short enough to stay well clear of the opposite surface. The 3/4-inch length also works when joining narrow stiles or rails where a longer screw's tip would exit the edge. Cabinet shops running mixed stock thicknesses keep this length on hand specifically for those shallow-pocket scenarios that a standard 1-1/4-inch or 1-1/2-inch screw would blow through.
Fine thread is the correct choice for hardwood face frames. The higher thread count gives more contact surface in dense grain, so the screw holds without relying on aggressive thread geometry that can crack tight-grained maple or oak. The Type 17 Auger point carries that logic through to the tip: the longitudinal flute removes wood fiber ahead of the leading thread rather than compressing it, keeping driving torque low and reducing split risk at the end grain or near a glue joint. The modified pan head works with both of these features by distributing clamping force across a flat bearing surface rather than wedging into the pocket wall as the screw seats.
Custom cabinet shops assembling hardwood face frames from thinner ripped stock are the primary buyers. Furniture makers jointing narrow hardwood members where standard-length pocket screws are too long also rely on this size. On the residential side, finish carpenters fitting face-frame overlays to existing cabinet boxes find the 3/4-inch length gives them control over penetration depth when the substrate behind the pocket is shallow. The 500-piece box suits a shop working through a full kitchen run or a contractor stocking a job box for a remodel where face-frame trim work recurs across multiple rooms.
Coarse thread in hardwood can split the stile because the wide thread pitch wedges aggressively into dense grain. Fine thread spaces the threads more closely, giving more contact area and holding power without the same splitting pressure. For softwood, MDF, or plywood face frames, coarse thread is the better choice.
Yes, when the pocket is cut to the correct angle for the stock thickness. The screw does not need to span the full material depth to hold; it needs enough thread engagement past the joint line to clamp the two pieces together. The 3/4-inch length is sized for thin or shallow-pocket applications where a longer screw would exit through the back face.
A flat or bugle head tapers to a point as it seats, which can act as a wedge and split narrow stile stock. The modified pan head has a flat bearing surface that rests against the pocket wall and pulls the joint together without that wedging action, making it better suited for face-frame work in narrow hardwood members.
Kreg face frame screws are designed for use with Kreg pocket-hole jigs, and the SPS-F075 is listed in Kreg's screw selector for thin-stock and face-frame applications. Follow the jig's stock-thickness guide to confirm the correct drill setting for your material.
Fine thread holds less aggressively in softwood, MDF, and particleboard than coarse thread does. For face frames in those materials, a coarse-thread pocket-hole screw of the same length is the stronger choice.
When the joint is shallow and the wood is hard, a screw that is a half-inch too long or a thread pitch too coarse splits the work. This 3/4-inch fine-thread Kreg screw is the specific answer to that specific problem, and 500 to the box means a full face-frame job is covered in a single order.
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