Your question has, sadly, brought out my inner geek. Be warned that what follows is properly nerdy (awoooga)...
Colloquially, in the UK at least, some types of bolts* get called "screws" and some types of screws* get called "bolts". Even by engineers. The term "set screw" invariably means a fully-threaded fastener with a thread that does not taper. The term "bolt" is used more flexibly to mean a fastener with a thread that does not taper and which may or may not have an unthreaded portion.
The reason for the mixture of colloquial uses of the words when applied to fasteners is that "bolt" and "screw" are really engineering terms that relate to joints, not to the fasteners used to make those joints. A joint is "bolted" if a threaded fastener (whether or not is has an unthreaded shank) is passed through two or more unthreaded drilled parts, and is clamped onto those parts with a nut. A joint is "screwed" if the fastener threads into one of the parts. Or put another way... if you can shove the fastener clear through the joint then you've got a bolted joint. But if you have to rotate (i.e. screw) the fastener into the joint then you've got a screwed joint.
So a set-screw can also be used to make a bolted joint. And a [shanked] bolt can also be used to make a screwed joint.
Frustrating, isn't it? If you want to buy fasteners which specifically do, or specifically don't, have an unthreaded shank, the unambiguous terms "fully threaded" and "part threaded" are your best bet. That way, when you come across ebay listings offering "partially-threaded screws" and "fully-threaded bolts", your brain won't explode.
*There are, of course, screws that can't be called "bolts": woodscrews for example - they have a tapering thread so they can't be fitted with a nut and therefore must be threaded into one of the parts of the joint itself. And woodscrews - imperial ones at least - generally do have a shank except in smaller sizes. There are also bolts that can't be called "screws": coach-bolts, for example, which have a head that prevents them being rotated into the joint. And, yes, you can buy "fully-threaded coach-bolts".
Nerd-alert ends.
Edited by alpder, 12 November 2024 - 02:35 PM.