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Plastic pins are a nonconductive and nonmagnetic alternative to metal dowel pins. Use them as pivots, hinges, shafts, jigs, and fixtures to locate or hold parts.
Retract the nose by pulling the knob.
Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling the knob and rotating it 90°.
Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling the handle and rotating it 90°.
Install with a hex key for more torque than slotted long-nose spring plungers.
Install with a driver.
Slotted on both ends for installation with a screwdriver.
A flange keeps the plunger from being pushed through a hole when the ball is depressed.
Designed with a flange to keep the plunger from being pushed through a hole when the ball is depressed.
Install these spring plungers with a screwdriver—they're slotted on one or both ends.
Cut this stock to length to create the machine key you need. Straight keys, with a square or rectangular cross section, are the most common type of key. Install in a keyway to transmit torque from shafts to gears and other components.
Mount through the counterbored hole with a socket head cap screw to support and position workpieces and fixtures from the bottom or side.
As the workpiece pushes against the pin head in one direction, the internal spring pushes back to hold it in place for clamping.
Use these components in coordinate measuring machine (CMM) applications to raise a workpiece and reliably position it on a fixture plate with ¼"-20 holes.