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Mount these sprockets onto your shaft and secure with a set screw—no machining necessary.
Hardened teeth give these steel sprockets increased wear resistance for a long service life.
A wide hub provides these sprockets with stability under heavy loads.
The screw connections on these bushings easily mate to compatible quick-disconnect sprockets and pulleys.
Mount these hubless bushings flush into your sprocket or pulley for a slim profile with no protruding screws.
The tapered barrel on these bushings is split on both sides, allowing them to contract more tightly around the shaft than quick-disconnect and taper-lock bushings.
Also known as Trantorque bushings, these tighten with a twist of the collar nut—no screws needed.
Reduce the ID of sprockets, pulleys, and gears in low-torque applications.
A former industry standard, 14½° pressure angle gears are often found on older machinery.
The current industry standard, these 20° pressure angle gears have thicker, stronger teeth than 14½° pressure angle gears. They're also known as spur gears.
Worm gears use screw threads to reduce shaft speed by ratios of 10:1 and greater while transmitting motion at a right angle.
A type of miter gear where one gear is smaller than the other, bevel gears provide right-angle speed reduction at ratios ranging from 2:1 to 5:1. They’re more efficient than worm gears because they create less friction.