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These steel ball bearings handle higher loads than stainless steel and plastic bearings.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication. Because it's solid, the lubricant blocks out water and dust, extending the life of the bearing.
For greater accuracy and higher speeds, these bearings are made to tighter tolerances than standard ball bearings.
With a spherical raceway and two rows of balls, these bearings compensate for shaft misalignment.
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.
These 316 stainless steel bearings are more corrosion resistant than our other stainless steel bearings, but they have a lower load capacity.
Made of slippery plastic, these bearings do not require lubrication and have excellent corrosion and chemical resistance.
The flange ensures proper positioning inside a tube or housing.
Flanged and creating twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball bearings, these bearings ensure correct positioning within a tube or housing and resist radial loads.
These bearings have twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball 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.
Often paired with spring lock washers to strengthen their hold, these retaining nuts—also known as shaft nuts—keep vibration from shifting bearings, bushings, pulleys, and gears on your threaded shaft or spindle.
Used in pairs or with another bearing retaining nut, these jam nuts—often called shaft nuts—hold bearings, bushings, pulleys, and gears in place on your threaded shaft or spindle.