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An oversized diameter allows for finishing to your exact requirements.
Precision ground to a tight diameter tolerance, these rods are ready for turning in your lathe.
Gray cast iron machines faster with less wear on cutting tools than most types of steel. It's often fabricated into gears, pulleys, rollers, and bushings.
Ductile cast iron is strong, resilient, and able to handle repeated stress without breaking.
With a high amount of ferrite, these cast iron rods are easier to machine without cracking than other impact-resistant ductile cast iron rods. Use them to create bushings, gears, pulleys, and pistons.
Slide the shaft in to install, then tighten to secure. For use with light to medium loads where shaft alignment is not critical, these shaft supports brace the end of a linear shaft along the ground or other flat surface.
Found in hand-powered clamps, vises, grates, doors, and work tables, lead screws and nuts have broad, square threads that are well suited for quick assembly, high clamping forces, and lifting and lowering heavy objects.
Also known as single-start and self-locking lead screws and nuts, these have a single thread that runs the length of the screw. The nut travels only when the screw turns, so your system won't unexpectedly move when the lead screw is at rest.
Multiple thread channels (also known as thread starts) create faster linear travel than lead screws with a single thread start.
Join gray iron, ductile iron, malleable iron, and alloy cast iron to themselves, and to each other.
Made of 85% pure nickel, these electrodes join cast iron to itself, and to mild steel and stainless steel.
These nickel-free electrodes make nonmachinable welds. They’re often used on machine bases, furnace grates, and exhaust manifolds.
Use these ERCuAl-A2 rods to join different metals, such as cast iron, steel, stainless steel, copper, and bronze.
Use these cadmium-free alloys with most metals in general purpose applications.
No need to add flux—these alloys have it built in.
Use these alloys with most metals in general purpose applications.
These alloys create stronger bonds than standard brazing alloys.
When melted, these alloys form a thin liquid that easily flows into smaller gaps than standard gap-filling brazing alloys.
These alloys melt into thicker liquid than standard brazing alloys, which allows them to fill larger gaps.
Typically used with medium-pressure galvanized iron and steel threaded pipe fittings. Also known as Schedule 80.
Use this pipe in gravity-flow applications both above and below ground.
Combine fast-threading components to build a clamping assembly.