Adafruit
White Nylon Screw and Stand-off Set – M2.5 Thread
A comprehensive 420-piece white nylon screw and standoff set in M2.5 thread — the standard mounting size for most breakout boards, development boards, and si...
Get notified when back in stock
A comprehensive 420-piece white nylon screw and standoff set in M2.5 thread — the standard mounting size for most breakout boards, development boards, and single-board computers including Raspberry Pi, Feather, and similar platforms. Comes in a snap-open storage box.
Nylon hardware is non-conductive, lightweight, and easy to file or trim to size. It won't interfere with antennae, magnetometers, or sensitive electronics.
Key Features
- 420 Pieces – Screws, nuts, and hex standoffs in multiple lengths
- M2.5 Thread – Fits standard 2.5 mm mounting holes
- Non-Conductive Nylon – No electrical interference or short-circuit risk
- Snap-Open Storage Box – Keeps all pieces organised
Package Contents
- 120× M2.5 Hex Nuts
- 80× M2.5 × 4 mm Screws
- 80× M2.5 × 6 mm Screws
- 40× M2.5 × 10 mm Screws
- 20× 6 mm F-F Hex Standoffs
- 20× 8 mm F-F Hex Standoffs
- 20× 10 mm F-F Hex Standoffs
- 10× 12 mm F-F Hex Standoffs
- 20× 6 mm M-F Hex Standoffs
- 10× 12 mm M-F Hex Standoffs
Ideal For
- Mounting PCBs, breakout boards, and HATs
- Raspberry Pi and development board enclosures
- Prototyping and maker projects
- Applications where non-conductive hardware is required
Jargon buster
Plain-language definitions for the technical terms used above.
- breakout
- A breakout board carries a small or fine-pitched component and brings its connections out to standard, breadboard- and header-friendly pins. Describing a part as a breakout means it can be wired into a project without soldering directly to the component's tiny contacts.
- M2.5
- A metric screw thread size with a 2.5 mm nominal diameter. It matters for mounting because screws, standoffs, and holes must use the same size to fit securely without damaging the board.
- Thread
- A low-power wireless mesh networking standard designed for smart home and IoT devices. It matters because Thread devices can relay messages through each other, helping build reliable networks for sensors and controllers.
Find this product in
Brands
Related Tutorials
Free guides on learn.littlebird.com.au