Metal Workz LLC • Albany, Kentucky

Countersinking and Drilling Services

Precision countersink holes drilled into laser cut and fabricated metal parts so fasteners sit flush with the surface. In-house at our Kentucky facility, applied as part of a complete fabrication package or as a standalone service.

Flush Fit
Fasteners sit level with the surface
Steel, SS, Alum.
Materials we countersink
In-House
Applied at our Albany, KY shop
Nationwide
Parts shipped across the US
Countersinking
noun • manufacturing process
The process of cutting a conical recess into a pre-drilled hole so that the head of a flat-head screw, bolt, or rivet sits flush with or below the surface of the material. A countersunk hole has a wider, angled opening at the top that matches the taper of the fastener head, allowing the fastener to seat completely into the material rather than protruding above the surface.
Precision Countersinking

Countersinking and Drilling for Metal Fabricated Parts

Countersinking creates a conical hole profile that allows hardware to sit flush when joining parts together. It is one of the most common secondary operations applied to laser cut sheet metal parts, and when done correctly it improves both the appearance and the functional longevity of the finished assembly.

At Metal Workz LLC, we add countersinking to laser cut and fabricated parts as part of a complete in-house workflow. Parts can be laser cut, bent, countersunk, deburred, and powder coated without leaving our Albany, Kentucky facility. We also accept customer-supplied parts for countersinking as a standalone service.

Why It Matters

Benefits of Countersinking Your Parts

Flush Appearance

Flat-head fasteners seat completely into the material, leaving a clean, flush surface. No protruding bolt heads to snag clothing, catch on adjacent parts, or create an unfinished look.

Improved Longevity

A fastener that sits flush is less exposed to vibration, corrosion, and mechanical stress at the joint. Countersunk joints stay tighter longer than surface-mounted alternatives.

Better Paint and Coating Adhesion

Flush fasteners eliminate a common point of coating failure. When bolt heads protrude, powder coating and paint thin around the edges and chip. Countersunk joints coat evenly.

Cleaner Assembly

Parts with countersunk holes assemble faster and more accurately. Fasteners locate themselves in the recess during assembly, reducing misalignment and installation time.

Professional Finish

Countersinking is the mark of a finished, professionally fabricated part. It signals quality to end users and customers who receive or handle the finished assembly.

Fastener Compatibility

Hardware That Uses Countersunk Holes

Countersinking is used wherever a fastener head needs to sit at or below the material surface. Common hardware types that require countersunk holes include:

Flat-Head Screws

Machine screws and wood screws with a tapered head profile designed to seat flush in a countersunk hole.

Flat-Head Bolts

Structural bolts with a conical underhead that requires a matching countersink in the mating plate or bracket.

Rivets

Countersunk rivets sit flush with the sheet surface, commonly used in aerospace, automotive, and structural panel applications.

Countersunk Washers

Used in combination with standard fasteners to distribute load over a countersunk recess in thinner materials.

PEM Fasteners

Self-clinching PEM hardware often requires a countersunk pilot hole for correct installation and flush seating in sheet metal.

Custom Hardware

Any fastener with a tapered or conical head profile. Contact us with your hardware spec to confirm the correct countersink angle and diameter.

Service Details

Countersinking Service Specifications

SpecificationDetail
ProcessCountersinking (conical recess), through-hole drilling
Common countersink angles82° and 90° (most common); other angles available on request
MaterialsMild steel, carbon steel, stainless steel (304, 316), aluminum (6061, 5052)
Part typesLaser cut sheet metal, plate, fabricated assemblies, customer-supplied parts
Customer-supplied partsAccepted for countersinking-only orders
File formats acceptedDXF, DWG, STEP, IGES, PDF drawings with hole call-outs
Combined servicesLaser cutting, bending, welding, deburring, powder coating
Production volumeSingle pieces through production run quantities
LocationAlbany, Kentucky, shipping nationwide
Quote turnaroundTypically 1-2 business days
Materials We Work With

Metals We Countersink

Mild steel and carbon steel (A36, A572)
Stainless steel (304 and 316)
Aluminum (6061 and 5052)
Galvanized steel sheet
Laser cut sheet metal parts
Customer-supplied flat or formed parts
How We Work

Our Countersinking Process

01

Submit Files and Quote

Send your drawing with hole call-outs specifying countersink angle, diameter, and quantity per part. We review and respond within 1-2 business days.

02

Laser Cut and Drill

We laser cut your blanks in-house if required, then drill through-holes and apply countersinks to the specified angle and diameter at each location.

03

Inspect and Verify

Each part is checked to confirm countersink depth, angle, and position match your drawing before proceeding to any downstream operations.

04

Finish and Ship

Deburring, bending, welding, and powder coating are available in-house before your finished parts ship directly to you anywhere in the US.

Need countersinking added to a larger fabrication order? Most customers combine countersinking with laser cutting, bending, and powder coating as part of a complete part package. One order, one shipment, finished parts ready to assemble. Contact us to get started ›

Complete In-House Solutions

Combine Countersinking With Our Other Services

Countersinking is most valuable as part of a complete fabrication workflow. We handle every step in-house:

Common Questions

Frequently Asked Questions

What is countersinking?
Countersinking is the process of cutting a conical recess into the opening of a pre-drilled hole so that a flat-head fastener sits flush with or below the surface of the material. The recess matches the taper of the fastener head, typically at an 82-degree or 90-degree angle, allowing the screw, bolt, or rivet to seat completely into the material rather than protruding above it. The result is a flush, clean surface that looks finished and functions better than a surface-mounted fastener.
What is the difference between countersinking and counterboring?
Countersinking creates a conical (angled) recess that matches the tapered underhead of a flat-head fastener. Counterboring creates a cylindrical (flat-bottomed) recess that allows the head of a socket head cap screw or hex bolt to sit below the surface. The key difference is the shape of the recess: conical for countersinking, cylindrical for counterboring. The choice depends on the fastener type being used.
What countersink angles do you offer?
The most common countersink angles we work with are 82 degrees, which is the standard for imperial (inch) flat-head screws, and 90 degrees, which is standard for metric flat-head screws and many aerospace applications. Other angles are available on request. Specify the angle and fastener type when submitting your drawing and we will confirm the correct countersink geometry.
Can you countersink parts that you did not laser cut?
Yes. We accept customer-supplied parts for countersinking as a standalone service. Parts should already have the through-holes drilled to the correct pilot diameter for the countersink size required. Contact us with your material, part size, hole specifications, and quantity for a quote.
What materials can you countersink?
We countersink mild steel, carbon steel (A36, A572), stainless steel (304 and 316), aluminum (6061 and 5052), and galvanized steel. Contact us if you have a material not listed here to confirm compatibility.
How do I specify countersinking on my drawing?
A countersink call-out on a drawing typically includes the through-hole diameter, the countersink diameter at the surface, the countersink angle, and the quantity and location of holes. For example: a typical call-out might read "4x 0.200 dia thru, 0.390 dia x 82-deg csink." If your drawing lacks a formal call-out, include the fastener type and size you are using and we can determine the correct countersink geometry from that.
How do I get a countersinking quote?
Submit your drawing and project details through our contact page at metalworkz.com/contact/ or call (606) 387-3121. Include your material, part dimensions, hole specifications, countersink angle, quantity, and any downstream operations needed. We typically respond within 1-2 business days.

Get a Countersinking Quote

Send us your drawing and project details for a fast, competitive quote. We respond within 1-2 business days.
368 KY-90 East, Albany, KY 42602

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