Hard to capture in a photo but the threads actually start like a rounded off triangle near the point and then fill out closer to a circle at the head. They're most often used in sheet and tube and are designed to somewhat extrude thin material and have thread pitch like a machine screw instead of a sheetmetal screw so that they create necessary thread engagement and are less prone to stripping the hole. As a result they don't look like the sort of self tapper most people are used to seeing, but it's super common in automotive since about the 90s. The ones Chrysler was using usually taper all the way to a point but typically the very end is cut off so there's just enough taper to fit into the hole and start grabbing (I believe this is done mostly for worker safety to not have sharp points sticking out, but most of the places they're used on our Jeeps are protruding into inaccessible spaces so the sharp point doesn't matter).
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