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Tighten just one set screw to clamp these bushings evenly around your shaft. The screw forces hydraulic fluid in between the double-walled sleeve, expanding the two walls against the shaft and the hub of your sprocket, pulley, or gear for a tight hold.
Reduce the ID of sprockets, pulleys, and gears in low-torque applications.
Each hub includes a set screw (unless noted), which bites into your shaft to hold the coupling in place.
The thick split spider on these couplings takes on twice as much torque as standard split spiders, while a set screw holds the hubs in place on your shaft. Also known as jaw couplings, use them to connect motors to pumps, mixers, and other high-torque equipment.
Each hub includes a set screw, which bites into your shaft to hold the coupling in place.
A strip of flexible spring steel wraps around the teeth of both hubs to absorb sharp, momentary load increases that can come from motor startups, emergency braking, or sudden impact with hard objects.
Customize the bore of these flexible couplings to align uncommon shaft sizes as well as shafts that have become undersized from wear or oversized from coatings.
Safely connect slightly misaligned shafts near food lines—the spider on these couplings contains metal, so it’ll trigger a metal detector if a piece frays off and contaminates your batch.
With a rugged roller-chain design, these couplings provide excellent torque and angular misalignment capacities.
Made with lightweight nylon sleeves, these gear couplings require less energy to move than other high-torque flexible couplings. They compensate for parallel, angular, and axial misalignment.
Use these gear-shaped couplings for high-speed and high-torque applications.
Magnetic force transfers torque from one half of these couplings to the other; there’s no contact between the parts, so they won’t wear. Couplings compensate for angular and parallel misalignment.
A bolt in each corner makes for a secure, even hold.
Use these bearings in corrosive environments and under water.
The lubricant in these mounted ball bearings is suitable for incidental contact with food.
Synthetic grease enables these bearings to operate in temperatures up to 400° F—nearly double the maximum temperature of standard mounted ball bearings with four-bolt flange.
Made to withstand frequent washdowns, these bearings are permanently lubricated, which means you’ll never have to add lubricant. Use them in hard-to-reach areas in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants.
The tapered rollers in these bearings support large shafts at high static loads.
With a four-bolt flange for mounting and an IP69K certification approving them for washdown environments, these mounted ball bearings are used in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants.
With all three mounting holes on one side, you can position the bearing above or below the mounting surface.
Rated IP69K for washdowns, these bearings stand up to frequent cleanings in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants.
Designed with a thin, compact housing, these bearings are good for space-constrained applications.
Used in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants, these mounted ball bearings are IP69K certified for washdown environments and have a two-bolt flange for mounting.
Ball bearings operate with less friction than other bearings, so you can run them at higher speeds.
Permanently lubricated and IP69K certified for washdown environments, these mounted ball bearings are useful for hard-to-reach areas in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants. Mount them using their two-bolt flange.
The lubricant in these mounted ball bearings is NSF registered H1 and FDA compliant for incidental contact with food.
Synthetic grease enables these bearings to operate in temperatures up to 400° F—nearly double the maximum temperature of standard mounted ball bearings with two-bolt flange.
An elongated mounting hole on one side of the flange lets you adjust the position of these bearings without having to remove your shaft.
Ball bearings operate with less friction than other bearings, so they can run at higher speeds.
A solid polymer lubricant surrounds the balls, eliminating the need for additional lubrication.
These bearings are rated IP69K as able to withstand washdown environments such as food, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants. Their fluoropolymer-coated housing is as corrosion resistant as 304 steel and safe for contact with food.
Also known as tapped-base bearings, these ball bearings mount to surfaces from the bottom through threaded holes. Because of their narrow profile, they’re commonly used in tight-clearance spaces, including systems where multiple shafts are mounted close together.
Keep shafts, such as those with a shoulder, clear of the mounting surface. These bearings have a higher mounting base that gives them more space to the mounting surface than standard mounting bases.
Meeting IP69K for washdown environments, these mounted ball bearings are used in food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants.
Synthetic grease or graphite enables these bearings to operate in high temperatures.
Roller bearings have a thinner profile and larger contact area than ball bearings, making them stronger and more space-efficient than ball bearings.
Combine with threaded pipe to mount these bearings in a variety of positions without the need for a flat mounting surface.
Swap out worn inserts instead of replacing the entire mounted unit.
Slip these bearings onto a shaft and secure with the included set screws, no special tools required.
Secure these bearings in washdown areas, such as food, beverage, pharmaceutical, and chemical plants, by tightening the set screw onto a shaft—no additional collar needed.