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Mount components onto food processing lines, walls, and sanitary equipment while leaving space to clean in between.
Protect components from electrical charges.
Change thread sizes or types, such as fine to coarse threads, on parts without changing gender.
Change inch threads to metric with these adapters, or swap metric threads for inch. An external hex lets you tighten or loosen them with a wrench.
Connect two differently sized male-threaded parts, such as threaded rods, and tighten with a standard wrench.
Adapt threaded rods from inch to metric. These adapters connect two male-threaded fasteners, so you can change the gender of a mating part or increase or decrease its thread size. The hex-shaped body fits into the head of a standard wrench.
Often called sleeve nuts, these thread adapters fasten parts with right-hand threads to parts with left-hand threads.
Need to join two female-threaded parts, such as coupling nuts, with dissimilar inch thread sizes? Attach them to these adapters and tighten the exterior hex nut for a secure connection.
One side inch, one side metric, and a hex in the middle—these handy fasteners connect two female-threaded parts, such as coupling nuts, adapting from inch threads to metric. Tighten with a standard wrench.
Use these buttons to support and position workpieces and fixtures from the bottom or side. Their hex shape lets you screw them into a threaded hole with a wrench or socket.
The swiveling tip supports uneven and angled surfaces.
Twist these bumpers into a threaded hole. Often used as feet, spacers, and vibration dampers, they absorb shock to prevent damage to equipment and surfaces.
All of these bumpers are reinforced with a steel core for strength. Often used as feet, spacers, and vibration dampers, they absorb shock to prevent damage to equipment and surfaces. They're also good for starting and stopping motion on automated machines. Twist them into a threaded hole.
Mount these bumpers on a threaded stud. All are reinforced with a steel core or base plate for strength. Often used as feet, spacers, and vibration dampers, they absorb shock to prevent damage to equipment and surfaces. They're also good for starting and stopping motion on automated machines.
A spring plus serrated grooves that grip the lip of the channel provide a more secure hold than standard strut channel nuts.
Serrated grooves grip the lip of the channel.
Also known as insert nuts, these convert slotted holes to threaded round holes and keep them centered in the channel.
Insert these nuts into the long open side of strut channel and twist to secure. A built-in washer enables one-handed installation.
Quickly attach these nuts by twisting them closed at any point along a threaded rod.
A tab fits tightly against the lip of the channel to keep these nuts from slipping.
In addition to serrated grooves for gripping the lip of the channel, these nuts have wings for easy positioning.
There's no need for additional fasteners with these nuts—they combine a strut channel nut with a spring and a threaded stud.
Use adapters on the ends of forcing screws and face-grip puller legs when pulling shafts, bearing caps, and pinions.