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Choose the channel and wear strip or brush you need for your application.
Bend these guides without any extra equipment to match the corners and curves in your conveyor.
Conveyor guides direct and position material.
An adjustable wear strip makes it easy to quickly position these guides and direct different sizes of material.
Guides withstand constant temperatures up to 275° F or intermittent temperatures up to 300° F.
Use these guides when positioning static-sensitive material such as electronic equipment.
Use brackets and connectors to create vertical and horizontal support arms.
The pivoting joint on these rods makes angle-mounting easy.
These rods have a bracket on the base so they're ready to mount.
To make aligning multiple brackets during installation easy, these rods have 1/8” graduation marks. They also have a pivoting joint, so you can adjust the angle of your mount.
Use the hole at the end of these rods to attach sensors and accessories without clamps.
Graduated in 1/8" or 1 mm increments, these rods make it easy to align multiple brackets during installation.
Brackets are sized to mount sensors and reflectors to a conveyor frame.
Clamps hold guide rails in place or join ends of a rail together.
Spacers increase the distance between a bracket and the conveyor frame.
Swap out, add, or adjust components on these mounts to get your conveyor guide exactly where you need it.
Take the guesswork out of precisely aligning a conveyor guide—these mounts have graduations every 1 mm.
Brackets mount to the frame of a conveyor to hold mounting rods.
Separate products into distinct lanes with guides and nose plows.
Keep materials orderly and separate products into distinct lanes.
Suspend trays, plates, and drip pans underneath a conveyor.
These brackets mount to the frame of a conveyor to hold guide clamps.
Add a package stop on a conveyor to control product flow and allow for accumulation.
Automate stopping loads on a conveyor—the rod on these cylinders extends to stop loads and retracts to let them pass.
Control the movement of loads on your conveyor—the rod on these air cylinders extends to stop loads and retracts to let them pass.
Space out parts on your conveyor line or vibratory feeder. Also known as escapements, these air cylinders have at least one finger that extends to hold parts and then retracts to release them.
Stop heavy material in its tracks. With the same footprint as regular load-stopping air cylinders, these air cylinders have a lever end that absorbs 30% more force.
Add rollers to T-slotted framing to create flow rails, ball transfer tables, and other manual conveyors.