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These steel ball bearings handle higher loads than stainless steel and plastic bearings.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication. Because it's solid, the lubricant blocks out water and dust, extending the life of the bearing.
Wider than our standard ball bearings, these rugged bearings are good for handling heavy loads at low speeds.
Use these bearings where high speed and precision are not required.
With a spherical raceway and two rows of balls, these bearings compensate for shaft misalignment.
For use on tapered shafts and round shafts with adapter sleeves, these ball-bearings have a spherical raceway to compensate for shaft misalignment.
Bearings are 440C stainless steel for good corrosion resistance.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication. Bearings are 440C stainless steel.
Made to tight tolerances, these 440C stainless steel bearings combine speed and accuracy with corrosion resistance.
Good for applications with incidental food contact, these 440C stainless steel bearings have a food-grade, solid polymer lubricant between the balls and race that eliminates the need for additional lubrication.
These 316 stainless steel bearings are more corrosion resistant than our other stainless steel bearings, but they have a lower load capacity.
Made of slippery plastic, these bearings do not require lubrication and have excellent corrosion and chemical resistance.
With two rows of balls, these lightweight bearings have greater durability and load capacity—and a wider profile—than single-row plastic bearings.
Made of PVDF, these bearings resist moisture absorption, so they won’t warp in underwater applications.
The flange ensures proper positioning inside a tube or housing.
Flanged and creating twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball bearings, these bearings ensure correct positioning within a tube or housing and resist radial loads.
Install these acetal bearings in caustic environments and where lubrication can’t be used. They have good all-around corrosion and chemical resistance.
No need to worry about precisely aligning these bearings—they swivel to compensate for up to 5° of shaft misalignment.
When speed and accuracy matter most, opt for these bearings. They’re made to tighter tolerances than standard flanged ball bearings.
Made with either PEEK or graphite, these ball bearings work in applications that are too hot for most other ball bearings.
These bearings have twice as many contact points as angular-contact ball bearings.
Install these bearings for use with combined radial and thrust loads. They are often used in spindle applications and can be combined with cylindrical roller bearings to better handle radial loads.
An ABEC-7 rating means these bearings are made to some of the tightest tolerances, so they operate at the highest speeds.
Steel balls and washers allow these bearings to handle higher loads than bearings with stainless steel components.
A combination of stainless steel and nylon components provide increased corrosion resistance over standard thrust ball bearings.
Use these bearings as miniature high-precision turntables. They have a unique design that allows your shaft to sit on top of the bearing rather than being inserted through it.
Reinforced with polyester fabric, these plastic bearings have load and speed capabilities comparable to metal bearings.
Found anywhere from machine tool spindles to conveyor rollers, these bearings have a two-piece design that allows for adjustment.
For a more compact machine, these bearings have thinner inner and outer rings than high-load crossed-roller bearings. Route hydraulic lines, electrical wiring, and other components through the inside of the bearing.
With thicker inner and outer raceways, these bearings can handle heavier loads than thin-profile crossed roller bearings. Mounting holes on the inner and outer rings allow for fastening onto hollow joints and shafts.
The thicker inner and outer raceways on these bearings can handle heavier loads than the thin-profile crossed-roller bearings.
With thinner inner and outer rings, these bearings keep your machines more compact than high-load crossed-roller bearings. Route hydraulic lines, electrical wiring, and other components through the inside of the bearing. Mounting holes on the rings allow for fastening onto hollow joints and shafts.
Two rows of rollers give these bearings load capacities over five times higher than comparably sized tapered-roller bearings.
A built-in thrust ball bearing reduces wear from adjacent shaft components, while the needle-roller bearing supports radial loads.
Double rows of tapered bearings support large shafts with heavy loads.
Also known as drawn-cup roller bearings, these are our thinnest roller bearings. The outer ring is drawn out to form a lip that holds the bearing together.
These bearings have higher radial load capacity, speed, and accuracy than standard needle-roller bearings.
The needles in these bearings roll freely in one direction, but lock to transmit torque when the rotation of the shaft is reversed. Also known as drawn-cup roller clutches.
With cylindrical rollers to distribute load over a large surface area, these bearings are often used to support heavy loads at high speeds in applications such as power generation and metal recycling.
Thinner rollers allow these bearings to fit in tighter spaces than tapered-roller thrust bearings.
Thick, tapered rollers stand up to extremely high thrust loads.
Cylindrical-roller thrust bearings handle higher loads than needle-roller thrust bearings. They also run at faster speeds than tapered-roller thrust bearings.
Use these bearings in corrosive environments and under water.
Roller bearings have a thinner profile and larger contact area than ball bearings, making them stronger and more space-efficient than ball bearings.
Use these bearings for light loads and small shafts. The closed backing blocks out dust and other contaminants.
These roller bearings handle extremely high speeds for their small size.
Made of high-performance plastic, these insert bearings last longer than metal insert bearings. They also don’t require lubrication.
Also known as spherical bearings, swivel joints support angular misalignment. Press them into a hole or housing where a ball joint rod end won’t fit.