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With a thickness that's precision ground to a tight tolerance, these bars are sometimes called flat stock.
These rods are precision ground and held to a strict straightness tolerance, so they're ready for turning in a lathe.
Ready for turning in a lathe, these rods are precision ground and held to a strict straightness tolerance.
Precision ground and held to a strict tightness tolerance, these rods are ready for turning in a lathe.
Also known as flat stock, the thickness on these sheets and bars is held to a tight tolerance.
Ready for turning in your lathe, these rods are precision ground and held to a strict straightness tolerance.
These sheets and bars are precision ground to a tight thickness tolerance.
The thickness, length, and width are oversized for finishing to your exact requirements.
Precision ground and held to a strict straightness tolerance, these rods are ready for turning in your lathe.
Hardened for increased abrasion and impact resistance, these rods are precision ground with a tight diameter tolerance.
These precision-ground sheets and bars are held to a tight thickness tolerance.
With an oversized thickness, length, and width, these bars can be finished to your exact requirements.
Ready for turning in a lathe, these rods are precision ground to a tight diameter tolerance.
Hardened for increased abrasion and impact resistance, these precision-ground rods have a tight diameter tolerance and are ready for turning in your lathe.
These rods, also known as drill blanks, have an undersized diameter for machining your own jobbers'-length drill bits.
These rod sets are supplied in a metal index case with fold-out panels.
Also known as reamer blanks, these rods are hardened for increased abrasion and impact resistance.
Ready for turning in a lathe, these precision-ground rods have a tight diameter tolerance and are held to a strict straightness tolerance.
These bars are precision ground to a tight thickness tolerance.
Made from powdered metal, M4 tool steel has a consistent microstructure that gives it outstanding resistance to wear and abrasion. It is comparable to CPM Rex M4.
Also known as cobalt steel, this M42 tool steel maintains its hardness in high-speed cutting applications that generate intense heat. Use it to make tools for cutting extremely hard materials.
The thickness on these bars is precision ground to a tight tolerance.
All set for turning in your lathe, these precision-ground rods are held to a strict straightness tolerance.
Also known as flat stock, these bars have an oversized thickness, length, and width for finishing to your exact requirements.
The diameter on these rods is precision ground while the straightness is held to a strict tolerance, so they're ready for turning in a lathe.
Oversized for finishing to your exact requirements.
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.
Each piece is precision ground to offer tighter tolerances than standard 17-4 PH stainless steel.
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.
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.
Eight times straighter than standard rotary shafts, these tight-tolerance shafts minimize vibrations and reduce wear to bearings and other components. They also have diameter tolerances that are twice as tight as standard rotary shafts.
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.
In addition to diameter tolerances that are twice as tight as standard keyed shafts, these shafts include a traceable lot number and test report. Use them with machine keys to transmit torque to gears, sprockets, and other power transmission components.
Thread these shafts into a tapped hole to support idler sprockets and pulleys in tensioning applications.
Mount the flange to a machine or wall to support idler sprockets and pulleys in tensioning applications. They include washers and a nut to position your component and hold it in place.
A flat surface area allows set screws to dig into the shaft for securely mounting gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Connect these internally threaded shafts directly to threaded components, or use a fastener to secure. They have a flat surface area that allows set screws to dig into the shaft for securely mounting gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Attach threaded accessories, such as mixer propellers and fan blades, to the end of these shafts.
The diameter of these shafts is slightly smaller than listed, so precision ball bearings (ABEC-3 and above) slide on without any tools.
Good for hydraulic systems, machine tools, and other high-torque applications, these shafts have teeth that transmit high rotational loads.
Connect these internally threaded shafts directly to threaded components, or use a fastener to secure.
A shoulder near the end of the shaft provides a stop for gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Clip retaining rings into the grooves to separate and position gears, sprockets, and bearings.
Combine these general purpose shafts with a linear bearing and shaft support to create a basic linear motion system.
For your compliance and quality assurance needs, these shafts come with a material certificate with a traceable lot number.
Lighter than solid shafts, hollow shafts reduce your total system weight and allow you to run various media such as electrical wiring, compressed air tubing, coolants, or lubricants through the center.
Keep a material certificate on hand for compliance and quality assurance needs. Certificates include a traceable lot number and material test report. These hollow shafts reduce system weight and allow you to run various media such as electrical wiring, compressed air tubing, coolants, or lubricants through the center.
Internal threads allow you to mount these shafts onto threaded studs and fasteners, no shaft supports needed.
Mount these externally threaded shafts into tapped holes rather than using a shaft support, or attach a hex nut, shaft collar, or other threaded accessory.
For a snug fit with a linear bearing in high-precision applications, these shafts are turned, ground, and polished to tight diameter and straightness tolerances.
With 2" of each end softened, it's easier to machine a custom end for mounting. The rest of the shaft is case-hardened, which increases hardness and wear resistance on the surface of the shaft while allowing the center to remain soft for absorbing stresses caused by shifting loads.
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.
These shafts include a support rail for a stable setup that eliminates bending and prevents linear bearings from rotating.