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Determine if stainless steel is the right material for you and which types will work best.
This material has tighter tolerances than standard 304 stainless steel.
This material has tighter tolerances than standard 303 stainless steel.
This material is precision ground to offer tighter tolerances than standard 316 stainless steel.
With a diameter that’s held to a close tolerance, this material is hardened for increased wear and abrasion resistance.
Ready for turning in your lathe, these rods are precision ground to a tight tolerance.
Precision ground on the top and bottom to a tight tolerance.
Hardened for superior wear resistance, these rods are precision ground to a tight diameter tolerance so they’re ready for turning in a lathe.
Precision ground to a tight diameter tolerance, these rods are all set for turning applications in a lathe.
Also called flat stock, these precision-ground bars are held to tight thickness and width tolerances.
Hardened for improved strength and wear resistance, these rods are precision ground to a strict diameter tolerance. Use them for turning applications in your lathe.
Each piece is precision ground to offer tighter tolerances than standard 17-4 PH stainless steel.
Also known as Project 70+, this material machines faster with less wear on cutting tools than standard 17-4 PH stainless steel.
Combine these general purpose drive shafts with gears, sprockets, and bearings to transmit rotary motion.
These shafts have keyways only on the ends, leaving a plain shaft in the center. Use the keyways with machine keys to transmit torque to gears, sprockets, and other keyed components. Use the middle of the shaft with bearings and other round-bore components.
The diameter of these shafts is slightly smaller than listed, so precision ball bearings (ABEC-3 and above) slide on without any tools.
A flat surface area allows set screws to dig into the shaft for securely mounting gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Clip retaining rings into the grooves to separate and position gears, sprockets, and bearings.
A shoulder near the end of the shaft provides a stop for gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Combine these general purpose shafts with a linear bearing and shaft support to create a basic linear motion system.
Internal threads allow you to mount these shafts onto threaded studs and fasteners, no shaft supports needed.
These shafts include a support rail for a stable setup that eliminates bending and prevents linear bearings from rotating.
Replace worn shafts in two-piece support-rail shaft systems, or mate with a support rail to create your own. The tapped mounting holes match those on our Support Rails.