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Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling the knob and rotating it 90°.
Quickly align, join, or hold machine components in place in food, pharmaceutical, and other sanitary environments. Pulling the plunger knob and twisting it 90° will lock the nose into its retracted position.
Retract the nose by pulling the knob.
The ring allows you to attach these spring plungers to a lanyard.
Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling the ring and rotating it 90°.
Use the lanyard as a tether to secure the spring plunger to machinery and prevent accidental drops.
Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling the handle and rotating it 90°.
Install by hand or with a hex key in low-clearance applications.
Thread onto machinery or attach a knob or handle to the threaded spindle.
A T-handle makes these spring plungers easy to grip.
A quarter turn of the handle locks these plungers in the retracted position. The T-handle is easy to grip.
An L-handle takes up less space than a T-handle.
A smooth ball handle is easy to grip and won't catch on other parts.
A quarter turn of the handle locks these plungers in the retracted position. The smooth ball handle is easy to grip and won't catch on other parts.
Add a knob or handle to the threaded shank.
Two holes in the plate allow these plungers to be mounted to a flat surface.
Lock the nose into the retracted position by pulling and rotating the knob.
Lock the nose in the retracted position by pulling the knob and rotating it 90°.
Use an arbor press or similar pressure tool to install these spring plungers into a panel.
Insert the nose into a panel; then thread on the nut and tighten using an installation wrench.
A large handle makes gripping these latches easier than other lift-and-drop barrel slide-bolt latches.
Slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to secure.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back—slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to secure.
No hands needed—step on the top cap to latch the bolt; retract it by pressing the side release button.
Also known as cane bolts, these latches have the added height that's needed to bridge large vertical gaps. Install them at the top or bottom of swinging doors and gates to hold them in an open or closed position.
Push the bolt into the strike plate to secure doors, gates, and cabinets.
The mounting screws on these latches are concealed to prevent tampering.
Bolts are spring-loaded to stay latched until you activate the pull.
Pull the chain-grip to unlatch hard-to-reach doors and panels.
Push the knob to slide the bolt that secures these latches and then press the button to release the bolt.
The strike has angled ends so these latches can accept their bolt even when doors become misaligned.
The mounting screws on these padlockable latches are concealed to prevent tampering.
These padlockable latches have the added width that's needed to bridge large horizontal gaps. They are often used on double-door gates to hold them in an open or closed position.
These padlockable latches are reversible for right- and left-hand mounting.
To prevent tampering, the mounting screws on these latches are concealed.
A large handle makes gripping these latches easier than other lift-and-drop barrel padlockable slide-bolt latches.
Slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to hold, then secure with a padlock.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back.
Choose these locks if you need several locks that open with the same key.
Choose these locks if you need locks that each open with a different key.
A red indicator on the side of these locks is visible when they are open and hidden when they are locked.
Quickly push these hasps closed to conveniently secure doors. They’re nonlocking, and there’s no opening for a padlock.
This lock has a latch bolt to secure doors in the closed position.
These hinges with holes are spring loaded—pull the handle to retract the pin and disconnect a door; release the handle and the pin snaps back.
These hinges without holes are spring loaded—pull the handle to retract the pin and disconnect a door; release the handle and the pin snaps back.
A keeper holds the pin in a retracted position to make reconnecting doors easier than other pull-release quick-disconnect hinges.
To make reconnecting doors easier than other pull release quick disconnect hinges, these have a keeper that holds the pin in a retracted position.
To retract the pin and disconnect a door, squeeze the hinge handles together. Release the handles and the pin snaps back.
Squeeze the hinge handles together to retract the pin and disconnect a door; release the handles and the pin snaps back.