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Each hub includes a set screw (unless noted), which bites into your shaft to hold the coupling in place.
Designed to grip evenly around your shaft, these couplings provide more holding power than set screw couplings without marring the shaft.
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.
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.
Often used in electronics manufacturing facilities and other extra-clean environments, these shaft couplings are cleaned and individually bagged to keep out contaminants.
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.
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.
Also known as Schmidt couplings, these handle higher angular misalignment than other three-piece couplings. Good for applications with varying shaft misalignment, they're commonly used with conveyor rollers and roller feeds in printing and packaging machines.
Use these gear-shaped couplings for high-speed and high-torque applications.
A flexible tire on these couplings safeguards components on your shafts by reducing vibration and shock.
With a rugged roller-chain design, these couplings provide excellent torque and angular misalignment capacities.
Connect splined shafts to keyed shafts. These couplings are commonly used to connect hydraulic pumps, compressors, and other heavy duty equipment, which often have splined shafts, to electric motors and other components that often have keyed shafts.
For use with splined shafts, which are commonly found in gearboxes and pumps, these couplings are capable of transmitting more torque than couplings for round and keyed shafts.