If you’ve ever stood beside a humming pump on a chilly morning, watching a wall pour climb, you know the quiet hero is the formwork wing nut. It looks simple. It isn’t. This tiny clamp point translates into tens of tons of pressure resistance across a formwork face. The tie rod system does the heavy lifting; the nut locks it in—again and again.
From Horizon’s facility at Hustpark Building No. 4, Zhongxing East Street, Xingtai, Hebei, China, the Wing nut & tie rod set ships worldwide. The tie rod anchors panels, sometimes left embedded as a “lost part.” The nut, waler plate, and water stop round out the system. Many customers say the upgrade from generic castings to ductile-iron nuts is the moment leakage stops and rework costs nose-dive.
In practice, a formwork wing nut mates with DW15 or DW20 threaded rods, drawing panels tight against walers. Simple, fast, glove-friendly—especially when time is short and pour windows are unforgiving.
| Thread interface | DW15 (15/17) and DW20 (20/22) |
| Nut material | Ductile iron ≈ EN-GJS-400-15 (EN 1563), or forged steel for heavy-duty |
| Tie rod steel | Carbon steel, approx. ISO 898-1 Grade 5.8/8.8 equivalents (real-world use may vary) |
| Finish | Black, electro-galvanized, or hot-dip galvanized (ISO 1461) |
| Breaking load (DW15) | ≈ 180 kN; recommended working ≈ 90 kN |
| Breaking load (DW20) | ≈ 260 kN; recommended working ≈ 120 kN |
| Reusable cycles | 50–100+ with proper cleaning/lube (site conditions matter) |
Materials are selected to DIN 18216 intent for formwork anchorages. Nuts are cast (or forged), shot-blasted, machined, then coated. Tie rods are rolled-threaded to maintain fiber continuity. QC includes: tensile tests (ISO 6892-1 methods), proof-load checks, torque-to-failure sampling, coating thickness checks (ISO 1461), and random salt-spray for zinc variants. Service life? I’ve seen crews push well past 100 reuses when rods are kept straight and threads are oiled—small habit, big payoff.
| Vendor | Load rating | Certs | Lead time | Customization |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Horizon Form (China) | DW15 ≈180 kN, DW20 ≈260 kN | ISO 9001; in-house tests per DIN 18216 intent | ≈ 2–4 weeks | Logo, coating, special wings, water-stop sets |
| Vendor A (EU) | Similar ratings (spec-sheet) | ISO 9001, CE on related systems | ≈ 1–3 weeks | Broad SKUs, premium finishes |
| Vendor B (APAC) | Adequate for light-medium duty | Factory QC statements | ≈ 3–6 weeks | Limited |
A mid-rise core in humid coastal climate swapped to formwork wing nut sets with hot-dip galvanized rods. Result: tie replacement rate dropped ≈35%, panel seepage during cold joints fell noticeably (site QC logs), and cycle time improved by about half a shift per floor. Not glamorous, but the PM told me it “paid for itself by Level 9.”
Final thought: the formwork wing nut is one of those parts nobody praises when everything goes right—but everyone notices when it doesn’t. Choose a spec that matches your pressure, your reuse plan, and your weather, and you’ll feel the difference in the pour schedule, not just the toolbox.