We will reply to your message within an hour.
More
Made of steel, these rivet nuts add strong, reusable threads to sheet metal and other material that’s too thin to tap. The ribbed body on these nuts grips material better than smooth-body rivet nuts, so they won't twist when you tighten a screw.
Made of 18-8 stainless steel, these rivet nuts withstand water, mild chemicals, and outdoor conditions better than zinc-plated steel nuts. A ribbed body grips surrounding material to hold them in place, keeping them from spinning as you tighten screws.
These aluminum rivet nuts are one-third the weight of steel rivet nuts and have mild corrosion resistance.
A hex-shaped body provides the highest twist resistance of any rivet nut.
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.
Irregularly shaped threads in these nuts form a tight grip, preventing screws from backing out in vibration-heavy environments.
Made of stainless steel, these rivet nuts hold up better outdoors than zinc-plated steel rivet nuts.
To grip all layers of a sandwich panel—the top, core, and bottom—these rivet nuts have a two-piece construction.
About twice as strong as aluminum rivet nuts, these low-profile rivet nuts have a cadmium or tin-zinc plating for corrosion resistance.
Everything you need to add threads to sheet metal in low-clearance areas. Along with low-profile rivet nuts, these kits include mandrels and an installation tool.
A nonconductive rubber coating insulates the nut from electricity, seals out moisture, and damps vibration.
The closed end on these nuts keeps debris from passing through the nut or damaging the threads.
With an angled head, these rivet nuts sit flush in countersunk holes.
A high-strength alternative to blind rivets, use these screws when only one side of the material is accessible.
Everything you need to add threads to sheet metal, these assortments contain twist-resistant 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.
Smaller and lighter than cordless and hydraulic rivet nut tools, use these to install thin-walled bulbed, ribbed, sleeve, and smooth rivet nuts.
Install all styles of rivet nuts more quickly than cordless rivet nut tools.
Avoid failed rivet nuts by periodically testing the pull force of your rivet nut tool. These calibrators work with air-powered and hydraulic/air-powered rivet nut tools.