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Bearings are 440C stainless steel for good corrosion resistance.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication. Bearings are 440C stainless steel.
Made to tight tolerances, these 440C stainless steel bearings combine speed and accuracy with corrosion resistance.
Good for applications with incidental food contact, these 440C stainless steel bearings have a food-grade, solid polymer lubricant between the balls and race that eliminates the need for additional lubrication.
The flange ensures proper positioning inside a tube or housing.
Steel balls and washers allow these bearings to handle higher loads than bearings with stainless steel components.
Use where high loads and speeds are not required.
Use these bearings in applications with frequent starts and stops because they operate with very little friction.
These bearings stand up to a wider range of chemicals than other dry-running flanged sleeve bearings.
Also known as Oilite® bearings.
With oil for reduced friction and iron for added strength, these bearings handle frequent stops and starts in high-load applications.
For applications with frequent starts and stops, the oil in these bearings contains particles of slippery PTFE that lubricate the bearing during startup.
Increased iron content makes these bearings stronger and more resistant to shock loads than standard oil-embedded bearings; however they operate at lower speeds.
These bronze bearings are strong, wear resistant, and excellent at handling shock loads.
With extra iron and filled with oil containing slippery PTFE, these bearings support heavy loads that frequently start and stop along shafts. They’re sleeve bearings, so they handle loads parallel to the shaft.
The oil in these bearings is suitable for incidental contact with food.
Embedded with oil that is safe for incidental contact with food, these bearings are suitable for use in high-load applications such as bottling and filling lines in food processing plants. They are also known as Super Oilite® bearings.
Also known as drawn-cup roller bearings, these are our thinnest roller bearings. The outer ring is drawn out to form a lip that holds the bearing together.
Use ball bearings in debris-free environments and when speed is a necessity. They operate with less friction than sleeve bearings, so you can run them at higher speeds.
The choice for low-friction motion in high-temperature environments.
Choose ball bearings for debris-free environments and when speed is a necessity. They operate with less friction than sleeve bearings, so you can run them at higher speeds.
Also known as rod‐end bearings, ball joint rod ends have an eyelet and a ball that swivels to support angular misalignment.
These internally threaded rod ends have an eyelet and a ball that swivels to support angular misalignment. Also known as rod-end bearings.
Made of stainless steel, these externally threaded rod ends provide excellent corrosion resistance.
At only half the weight of glass, polycarbonate maintains excellent impact resistance across a wide temperature range. It's comparable to Lexan, Hyzod, Tuffak, and Makrolon.
Support shafts, bearings, and other moving parts that are routed through a hole. These grommets are slippery to allow parts to move freely in the hole. Install them on thin sheet-metal panels.
Also known as jig bushings, these metric drill bushings fit inside fixture plate holes to guide drill bits, counterbores, reamers, and other cutting tools. They improve accuracy so that your drilled holes and cuts are consistent from part to part.
Even under extreme drilling pressure, these metric bushings won't press through your jig plate. A flanged head on the top of the bushing acts as a stop, preventing it from moving as you push down your drill bit, reamer, or other cutting bit.