We will reply to your message within an hour.
Connect equipment and devices to a power supply.
Designed for indoor applications, these cords are often used to power appliances.
Also known as hospital-grade cords, these cords have an extra-tight connection to prevent them from detaching. The plug is marked with a green dot.
Create secure, vibration-resistant connections on both ends—these cord splitters have a hospital-grade plug and locking sockets.
The threaded ends on these cords seal out contaminants and resist coming loose from vibration in tough industrial environments and automated systems while sending power and signal to devices with M12 connections.
Use these cords with hydraulic and air-powered valves, motors, pumps, and pressure switches. They have a solenoid valve socket on one end and an M12 threaded plug on the other.
These self-coiling cords return to their retracted length after stretching for tangle-free storage.
Also known as hospital-grade cords, these have extra-tight connections to prevent them from detaching. The connectors are marked with a green dot.
Change the connection style between an outlet and your equipment.
The outlets have covers to keep out water and dust when not in use.
Attach the wires in a power cord to these reels for a permanent connection.
Made of polypropylene, these reels stand up to more impact than other reels, even those made of steel.
Store and transport cords.
Often used in offices and workstations, these outlet strips power multiple devices from a single wall outlet.
Separately control each device plugged into these strips—each outlet has its own power switch.
Save energy by automatically turning off unused outlets—the master outlet controls the follower outlets and shuts off power to those outlets when a device plugged into the master is turned off.
The power switch to these outlet strips is on an extension cord, so you can control power even when the strips are in hard to reach places, such as under a desk.
Keep personnel safe from electric shock with ground fault protection.
Filters between the outlets on these strips protect computers and other sensitive equipment from external signals that interfere with the equipment’s performance.
A filter through the middle isolates two pairs of outlets, so high voltage equipment plugged into one pair won’t affect the other pair.
Bring power to workstations that are not near a wall—these poles mount from the ceiling.
Install these extra-long strips onto the frame of an electrical cabinet.
The shielding blocks signal interference from nearby equipment and devices.
Use these unshielded cords where signal interference is not a concern.
The plugs on these cords pivot up to 90° in each direction to fit Ethernet jacks at awkward angles or in tight spots, such as behind equipment or in enclosures.
Often used in labs, storage facilities, and offices, the shielding blocks low to moderate signal interference from nearby equipment and devices. These cords have a flange on the socket end to mount them in a panel cutout.
Connect devices such as computers, printers, and mobile devices.
With a flange on the socket end, you can mount these cords in a panel cutout to move data between computers, printers, and mobile devices.
Display video from one source on two different monitors.
Connect computers, monitors, printers, and other devices with DB connections.
Securely connect equipment in data or signal applications.
Block signal interference from nearby devices, such as motors and transmitters, while maintaining a strong, stable connection for M12 threads.
Push these connectors together to quickly create signal and data connections in tight spaces. They need less space to mate than screw-together connectors, which require two hands to twist them in place.
Power hydraulic and air-powered valves, motors, pumps, and pressure switches.