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These aluminum rivet nuts are one-third the weight of steel rivet nuts and have mild corrosion resistance.
A ribbed body on these rivet nuts and wedges under the flange bite into soft materials such as brass, aluminum, and composites to prevent spinning when you tighten a screw.
These low-profile rivet nuts are one-third the weight of steel and have mild corrosion resistance.
A PVC foam seal under the flange keeps liquids and gasses from leaking between the nut and the surrounding material.
These rivet nuts have a smooth body and fit in smaller holes than twist-resistant rivet nuts. Assortments include rivet nuts, mandrels, nosepieces, and a plier-style installation tool.
Use these tools to install most styles of rivet nuts. Use a wrench to hold the tool and a ratchet to tighten the nut.
Turn these tools by hand to install low-profile rivet nuts.
Use two hands to maximize leverage when installing rivet nuts.
Use compressed air to install rivet nuts with less effort than manual tools. Tailored to specific thread sizes, these tools rotate a rivet nut with the exact force needed to collapse it onto your workpiece.
Install any size or style of rivet nut with a single tool. When you connect these tools to your compressed air line, the hydraulic fluid inside is pressurized, which generates the force needed to collapse a rivet nut.
Install any size rivet nuts in tight spaces or out in the field—no air hose or cord required.
Install rivet nuts with one hand.
Generate enough force with the assistance of a self-contained hydraulic system to install blind rivets with one hand.