Every winter, North-American and European drivers watch salt spray eat away at brake lines and battery trays, while EV owners fret over every extra gram that shortens range. A new generation of metal screws now tackles both headaches at once. Made from hardened aluminum alloy and coated with zinc-nickel, these fasteners weigh noticeably less than comparable steel bolts yet survive season after season of road salt before the first red rust appears. The coating also acts as a sacrificial anode, so galvanic corrosion is stopped when the screw meets aluminum subframes or magnesium battery housings common in EVs. Because the threads are rolled after heat treatment, the grain flow follows the contour, markedly extending fatigue life on potholed roads. Installation is DIY-friendly: a self-drilling point removes the need for pilot holes, cutting body-shop labor by a handy margin. For drivers, that translates into quieter panels, fewer warranty claims, and a welcome stretch of extra electric range on a full charge simply by deleting a modest dose of steel from the chassis. From the salty autobahns of Hamburg to the brine-soaked highways of Michigan, these metal screws are small parts delivering big protection and efficiency.