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These steel anchors are available with corrosion-resistant finishes.
These 18-8 stainless steel anchors have good chemical resistance.
More corrosion resistant than 18-8 stainless steel anchors, these 316 stainless steel anchors have excellent resistance to chemicals and salt water.
Keep fixtures solidly in place—these anchors have two locking wedges that won't shake loose.
A zinc plating provides corrosion resistance in wet environments.
Drive these tools with a hammer until the thicker portion of the tool makes contact with the anchor, causing it to expand.
These 316 stainless steel anchors have excellent resistance to chemicals and salt water.
Install like a stud anchor—just thread the anchor, a nut, and a washer onto the end of a threaded rod, drive into a hole, and turn the nut to expand the base. Also known as rod anchors, they're often used with threaded rod to hang pipe and wiring.
Also known as caulk-in anchors, these stay secure when there's not much material to hold.
Drive these tools with a hammer to expand anchors.
Often referred to as four-way expansion anchors, these expand in four directions to resist loosening from vibration.
Also known as double expansion anchors, these expand from both sides for full contact and a secure hold.
Use in applications requiring high strength.
Bolts are beveled under the head for a flush finish in countersunk holes.
For narrow holes and small cavities where toggle anchors won't fit.
A pivoting toggle bar creates a strong hold.
18-8 stainless steel anchors have good chemical resistance.
High-strength toggle anchors provide an extremely strong hold and stay in position when a bolt is removed.
A spring-loaded toggle holds against the back of the material.
You can use these versatile hangers in a threaded hole (as you would a screw), or secure them with a nut (as you would a bolt).
Made from steel comparable to Grade 5 steel, these bolts are suitable for most work-holding applications.
18-8 stainless steel studs have good chemical resistance and may be mildly magnetic. Also known as hanger bolts, use them to hang, mount, and fasten parts to wood structures.
These studs are also known as hanger bolts—use them to hang, mount, and fasten parts to wood structures.
These clamps rotate and pivot to ensure the rod hangs straight, even on sloped beams.
Attach these clamps to the flange of an beam, then hang a threaded rod from the threaded hole.
For centered load distribution, these clamps grip both sides of the beam and hang threaded rod from the middle.
Support strut channel at a right angle to the beam.
Install directly into a mounting surface to suspend threaded rod from ceilings and walls.
Fasten these brackets to ceilings, walls, beams, and joists to hang threaded rod.
Add an eye nut to threaded rod to hang the rod from rings, hooks, and hangers.
Also known as conduit hangers, these hangers load from the bottom so you can add or remove material without removing the mounted hanger.
Load material between the two halves of the ring and adjust the side bolts for a tighter fit than standard threaded-rod-mount clamping hangers.
These hangers provide maximum corrosion resistance in wet environments and stand up to frequent washdowns with harsh cleaners and sanitizers. Rounded edges, polished surfaces, and acorn or hex nuts that conceal threads reduce the number of places for bacteria to grow and make them easier to clean.
Also known as clevis hangers, these have a pivoting loop that adjusts for line movement and vibration. Combine with a threaded rod or other fastener to hang from the ceiling.
These hangers have a swivel nut for adjusting direction after mounting. They're also known as teardrop hangers. Combine with a threaded rod or other fastener to hang from the ceiling.
Access material quickly without uninstalling the mounted hanger. These hangers have a removable bolt for loading pipe, tube, and conduit from the side. Combine them with a threaded rod or other fastener to hang from the ceiling.
A roller on the bottom of these hangers compensates for movement due to expansion and contraction, such as in hydraulic applications. Combine with a threaded rod or other fastener to hang from the ceiling.
Use these hangers in corrosive environments and where chemicals are present. They're also known as teardrop hangers. Combine with a threaded rod or other fastener to hang from the ceiling.
Mount these general purpose U-bolts into an existing bracket, or combine with a mounting plate for a secure hold at the mounting surface.
A mounting plate provides a more secure hold at the mounting surface.
Add a mounting plate to your U-bolt for a more secure hold at the mounting surface.
Reduce vibration and noise in your lines—a plastic cushion tightly grips pipe, tubing, and conduit to prevent movement. Nylon-insert locknuts grip the thread to resist loosening.
Reduce vibration and prevent metal-to-metal corrosion on flat-bottomed objects such as strut channel and small duct.
A durable rubber cushion and mounting plate prevent corrosion and wear caused by metal-to-metal contact. The mounting plate is removable, so the U-bolts can be installed onto an existing line without needing to disassemble it.
Suspend and route flat-bottomed objects such as strut channel and small duct.
These fiberglass-reinforced polyurethane U-bolts have no metal parts, so they won't conduct electricity or cause metal-to-metal corrosion.
Support lines that expand and contract. The roller on these supports compensates for movement in your line from changing temperatures.
Mount these ringbolts into a threaded hole, or use the nut for through-hole mounting. The pivoting ring allows material to move freely.
Clamp onto metal tubes such as pipe, scaffolding, and railing to hang lighting fixtures, threaded rod, and equipment.
Designed for angular lifting, hoist rings resist stresses that would bend or break an eyebolt. They have a lifting ring that pivots 180° front to back to compensate for roll and sway when lifting heavy or unbalanced loads.
The ball bearing on these hoist rings makes it easy to rotate your load even after it’s suspended.
Remove the shackle after lifting while keeping the base installed for future use.
Keep on hand all the parts needed to assemble custom hoist rings.
With three different thread sizes, these hoist rings are useful when you need to lift different types of equipment.
The fixed base provides added stability and allows you to lift heavy loads with smaller thread sizes.
Choose these hoist rings when you need to lift your load from the side.
Easily slip these hoist rings in and out of threaded holes by pushing the button to retract their threads.
An indicator dot changes from red to black when these hoist rings are properly tightened, eliminating the need for a torque wrench.
Also known as nut eyebolts, these are designed for through-hole applications.
Install these stud-end plug-lock fittings on the end of wire rope for a strong hold and finished appearance.
Threads on one end make it easy to screw these hooks directly into a wall.
Weld these stubs to parts or use them to push objects apart instead of pulling them together.
Tighten these jam nuts against the turnbuckle body to prevent the fitting from loosening.
Limit damage during moderate earthquakes.