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Retract the nose by pulling the knob.
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.
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°.
Thread onto machinery or attach a knob or handle to the threaded spindle.
Install by hand or with a hex key in low-clearance applications.
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.
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.
An L-handle takes up less space than a T-handle.
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.
Use an arbor press or similar pressure tool to install these spring plungers into a panel.
Lock the nose in the retracted position by pulling the knob and rotating it 90°.
Insert the nose into a panel; then thread on the nut and tighten using an installation wrench.
Weld these catches in place for a strong permanent hold.
Bolts are spring-loaded to stay latched until you activate the pull.
Pull the chain-grip to unlatch hard-to-reach doors and panels.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back—slide the bolt and drop the knob into the notch to secure.
The spring-loaded bolt stays latched until you pull it back.
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.
To make reconnecting doors easier than other pull release quick disconnect hinges, these have a keeper that holds the pin in a retracted position.
A keeper holds the pin in a retracted position to make reconnecting doors easier than other pull-release quick-disconnect hinges.
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.