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The Kreg SPS-F125 is a #6 x 1-1/4-inch face frame and pocket-hole screw built for joining hardwood face frame members and attaching frames to cabinet boxes. Fine thread, a modified pan head, a Type 17 auger point, and a #2 square drive work together to pull hardwood joints tight without splitting the stock.
Face-frame construction puts specific demands on screw length. Too short and the joint lacks pullout strength; too long and the tip breaks through the opposite face. At 1-1/4 inches, this screw is sized precisely for the angled pocket bored through 3/4-inch stock, giving full thread engagement in the mating piece without over-penetrating. That fit applies whether the joint is a rail-to-stile connection or a face frame being fastened to the front of a cabinet box.
Hardwood face frames in maple, oak, or cherry need a fine-thread screw. Coarse threads generate too much radial pressure in dense grain and can cause splitting, especially near a pocket. The fine thread on the SPS-F125 bites without that pressure, and the Type 17 auger point shaves away fibers ahead of the thread, lowering driving torque through the full depth of the joint. The modified pan head completes the picture: its flat bearing surface pulls the joint closed evenly rather than acting as a wedge that could crack the stile.
Cabinet shops building face frames in hardwood species reach for this screw at the pocket-hole jig. It works equally well for stile-to-rail pocket joints and for tacking a completed face frame flush to the front of a cabinet box before glue sets. Finish carpenters assembling face-frame cabinetry on site use it for the same joints. The 500-piece box suits mid-size production runs and busy installation days without the excess of a bulk pail.
The fine thread is designed for hardwood species like maple, oak, and cherry. For softwood or sheet-goods face frames, a coarse-thread version is a better match.
A flat or bugle head acts as a wedge and can split the stile as it seats. The modified pan head bears flat against the wood, pulling the joint tight without driving a wedge through the grain.
No. The pocket is an angled bore, and a jig is the most common way to cut it, but a jig is not strictly required. The screw works in any correctly bored pocket, regardless of how the pocket was made.
Yes. The 1-1/4-inch length and modified pan head suit both frame joinery and frame-to-box attachment through a pocket in 3/4-inch stock.
A #2 square drive bit. The square recess is designed to hold the bit firmly in the recess during driving, which is especially useful at the angled approach of a pocket-hole joint.
When the work is hardwood face frames in 3/4-inch stock, the SPS-F125 supplies exactly what the joint needs: the right length, a fine thread that grips without splitting, and a head that closes the joint cleanly every time.
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