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A black-phosphate finish provides mild corrosion resistance.
Made of 18-8 stainless steel, these inserts have good corrosion resistance.
These inserts are made to stringent military specifications.
The strongest key-locking inserts we offer, these inserts are made to stringent military specifications.
Forming the strongest hold of any of our threaded inserts, these inserts have a distorted internal thread to lock screws into place and keys that drive into surrounding material to prevent slipping and rotating.
These inserts come with an installation tool. Drive the keys into the surrounding material for a more secure hold than thread-locking inserts.
Made of 18-8 stainless steel, these inserts have better corrosion resistance than black-phosphate steel.
These inserts are the most corrosion-resistant thread-locking inserts we offer.
These assortments include various sizes of thread-locking inserts.
A closed-end tap, drill bit, and installation bit are included with these inserts.
Adhesive on both the internal and external threads keeps these inserts in place and holds screws tight.
The knurled body holds these inserts in place in aluminum and other soft metals. Use an arbor press to install them in untapped holes.
These inserts cut their own threads in soft metals such as aluminum, so there's no need to tap the hole. Also known as Tap-Lok inserts.
The tapered shape makes it easier to guide these inserts into a hole during installation. Use a drill bit to create a straight hole, then taper the top half.
Assortments include various sizes of inserts, a soldering iron, a ceramic insulation tube, and installation tips.
Install these inserts into plastic parts to create a secure base for fasteners.
With the male threaded end on these inserts, mount components directly to plastic parts.
These 18-8 stainless steel inserts have better corrosion resistance than brass inserts and may be mildly magnetic.
Made from brass, these inserts are electrically conductive, nonmagnetic, and have good corrosion resistance.
These aluminum inserts are 70% lighter than brass inserts, electrically conductive, and nonmagnetic. They have good corrosion resistance, which is comparable to brass but not as good as stainless steel.
Made from brass, these inserts are nonmagnetic, corrosion resistant, and electrically conductive.
The flange keeps these inserts from pulling through a hole. Press them in from the underside of material, and install a screw from the top of material.
Made of 18-8 stainless steel, these inserts are stronger than brass inserts and less likely to corrode from mild chemicals and water. Install them into plastic to add durable threads.
Fins cut into the surrounding material for a more secure hold than knurled inserts. Made from brass, they’re nonmagnetic, corrosion resistant, and electrically conductive.
Push down on the inside of these inserts with an installation tool and they expand to hold firm in surrounding material.
These 18-8 stainless steel inserts have better corrosion resistance than aluminum inserts and may be mildly magnetic.
70% lighter than stainless steel, these aluminum inserts are mildly corrosion resistant and nonmagnetic.
Use these inserts to install fine-thread screws in existing holes.
The barbed sides keep these securely in place even before a screw is installed.
To handle greater pull force than press-fit inserts, these tapping inserts have external threads that bite into your material. They’re also known as Trisert inserts.
Press these inserts into a drilled hole and the flexible metal teeth anchor them in the material. Use them with carbon fiber, fiberglass, and garolite.
A wide flange distributes the load over a large area. Hammer these inserts into a drilled hole.
Steel inserts have high strength for durability.
Assortments include various sizes of tapping inserts for hardwood.
These 18-8 stainless steel inserts have excellent resistance to chemicals and may be mildly magnetic.
Made from brass, these inserts are nonmagnetic, mildly corrosion resistant, and electrically conductive.
Large threads cut into softwood such as particleboard for a strong hold.
Assortments include various sizes of tapping inserts for softwood.
The flange keeps these inserts from being pulled through a hole and provides a load bearing surface.
A closed end seals out elements and protects the threads on these inserts from debris.
An open end allows long screws and bolts to pass through the insert.
Mount these inserts flush or below the material's surface.
Knurls hold these inserts in hardwoods such as oak, maple, and walnut to prevent twisting.
Hooked prongs give these inserts excellent holding power even when removing screws.
Use where vibration is a concern—these tee nut inserts have distorted threads that lock screws in place.
Fewer prongs than other tee nut inserts reduce the risk of splitting hardwood—these inserts have three short prongs.
Hammer corrosion-resistant threads into pine, spruce, and other softwoods—these inserts have six prongs around the barrel for a strong hold that prevents them from twisting and loosening.
With only three prongs—fewer than our standard tee nut inserts—these inserts are less likely to split hardwood. They’re made of 18-8 stainless steel, so they stand up to mild chemicals and water better than steel inserts.
Ridges on the barrel of these inserts make them less likely to split hardwood than inserts with prongs. They're often used in wood that has been cut across the growth rings.
Six prongs around the barrel of these inserts provide a strong hold and prevent them from loosening and twisting.
The most corrosion resistant tee nut inserts we offer, these inserts stand up to chemicals and salt water.
These 18-8 stainless steel tee nut inserts have better corrosion resistance than zinc-plated steel tee nut inserts.