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Load material between the two halves of the ring and adjust the side bolts for a tighter fit than standard threaded-rod-mount clamping hangers.
Attach these clamps to the flange of an beam, then hang a threaded rod from the threaded hole.
These clamps rotate and pivot to ensure the rod hangs straight, even on sloped beams.
Also known as purlin clamps, these clamps are shaped to fit around beams that have a 45° or 90° lip.
For centered load distribution, these clamps grip both sides of the beam and hang threaded rod from the middle.
These clamps have a fixed hanger for rigid connections.
Join two beams in a straight line.
Fasten these brackets to ceilings, walls, beams, and joists to hang threaded rod.
Add an eye nut to threaded rod to hang the rod from rings, hooks, and hangers.
Hang these pulleys from hooks, screws, and bolts to assist with horizontal pulling or to guide a rope.
Mount these pulleys to a flat surface to assist with horizontal pulling or to guide a rope.
Add on to an existing screw conveyor or keep it running like new.
Quickly fasten threaded rod to strut channel. Snap these hinged nuts onto a threaded rod, then slip the head through a strut channel hole.
To provide corrosion resistance in wet environments, this framing is galvanized.
Combine track, mounting brackets, and hangers to create a system for hanging doors.
Add these stackable weights to the end of a beam scale to increase its total capacity. They’re also known as counterpoise weights.