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The knurled body holds these inserts in place in aluminum and other soft metals. Use an arbor press to install them in untapped holes.
Made from brass, these inserts are electrically conductive, nonmagnetic, and have good corrosion resistance.
These 18-8 stainless steel inserts have better corrosion resistance than brass inserts and may be mildly magnetic.
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.
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.
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.
The barbed sides keep these securely in place even before a screw is installed.
Use these inserts to install fine-thread screws in existing holes.
Push down on the inside of these inserts with an installation tool and they expand to hold firm in surrounding material.
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.
Strike these tools with a hammer or mallet to press threaded inserts into composites.
Compatible with push-to-expand and Dodge inserts, these tools push down a plate inside the insert so the insert expands and stays secure in the surrounding material.