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Also known as toe clamps, these grip the side of a workpiece to leave the top free for machining.
The built-in T-slot nut on these side clamps lets you clamp a part to a machine table quickly. Their small footprint leaves more free space on your table than standard side clamps.
Hold a workpiece securely from the side with minimal contact, leaving more of the workpiece free for machining.
Machine these clamps to match the contours of your workpiece and turn the screw to grip.
Unlike the smooth and flat edges of standard fixture clamps, these clamps have ridges that bite into parts, making them good for gripping castings and rough-cut stock.
Install these clamps into a slot in your fixture to grip at the bottom of a workpiece edge, giving the cutting tool maximum access.
Machine these fixture clamps to match the contours of your workpiece for a stronger grip.
Set one of these clamps between two workpieces in a fixture and tighten the screw to push the clamp's sides out for a secure hold.
Machine these fixture clamps to match the contours of your workpieces for a stronger grip. Place the clamp between the two workpieces in a fixture and tighten the screw to extend the sides of the clamp, creating a secure hold against both workpieces.
Tighten the spring-loaded socket head cap screw on these clamps to hold your workpiece from above.
Mount using the holes in the base.
Screw these clamps directly into a tapped hole in a fixture.
Secure a workpiece from the inside, leaving the outside clear for machining.
These clamps wedge against the workpiece ID to grip cast, unfinished, or uneven parts, leaving the outside clear for machining.
Attach to your bar clamp to hold material on three sides.
Three screws apply pressure to three sides of a workpiece.
Apply pressure to the side of a workpiece as well as the top and bottom.
Add components such as clamps, brackets, stops, rests, mounting plates, fixturing squares, risers, and V-blocks to build fixtures for welding and assembly.