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Slide drawers, panels, and doors with these tracks and rollers.
Screw and nut sets or nuts secure brackets and other accessories to rails.
Designed to wrap around the sides of strut channel, these brackets provide a stronger hold than other strut channel brackets.
Create a four-sided raceway for cable, or give a more finished look to strut channel structures.
Cover rough ends of strut channel.
To provide corrosion resistance in wet environments, this framing is galvanized.
In addition to being lightweight and strong, this plastic framing is nonconductive with good resistance to chemicals and salt water.
Half the weight of steel, this aluminum framing resists corrosion in wet environments.
Fittings come in two pieces to wrap around rails, so you can quickly modify existing structures without disassembling. Use clamp-on framing and fittings to form temporary partitions, modular conveyors, and workstations.
No need for fasteners—friction holds this framing together. Use press-fit framing and fittings to assemble carts, enclosures, and partitions.
These brackets mount to the frame of a conveyor to hold guide clamps.
Clamps hold guide rails in place or join ends of a rail together.
Also known as cross blocks, connectors join rods at different angles.
Brackets mount to the frame of a conveyor to hold mounting rods.
Brackets are sized to mount sensors and reflectors to a conveyor frame.
Suspend trays, plates, and drip pans underneath a conveyor.
Spacers increase the distance between a bracket and the conveyor frame.
Sets include an upper and lower track for hanging lightweight cabinet doors that slide past each other.
Restrict access to an area of your facility.
You can fill these with water for added stability and drain when not in use for easy transport.
The barricade with prismatic bands is high visibility for use in heavy traffic and low-light areas.
Mount items not designed for DIN rail by attaching them to these adapters.
Protect development boards from dust, water, and debris by mounting them to DIN rails inside control cabinets.
Mount and reposition components without drilling leaky holes in your steel enclosure—a strong magnet holds these DIN rails in place.
Stick this DIN rail in any enclosure to mount components without making screw holes that might leak.
Slide these clips on DIN rails—often used in equipment cabinet racks—to route and organize cables. Since these clips don’t require adhesive or screws, you can move them anywhere along the rail.
Select this plastic trim for its chemical resistance. Often used on panels, boards, signs, and mirrors, it protects edges from impact.
Slide up to 15 stacked sheets of paper between the clear frame and backing—friction holds them in place.
Route and organize wire, cable, and hose along your DIN rail. Unlike zip ties, these cable ties can be temporarily undone to add or remove material.
The rail is smooth plastic so the clips move more easily than on steel-rail organizers.