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【Material】:
Grip nut is made of high quality steel with color zinc plated surface, durable and corrosion resistant, not easy to break or deform, can be used with confidence.
【Product Features】:
Widely used in metal sheets or non-metal plastic, wood, and other sheets, rivet nuts can be firmly fixed on the sheet to provide tight thread locking force.
【Package Includes:】:
25 x M6 multi grip rivet nuts.
Court
Reviewed in the United States on September 15, 2024
very strong but you need a good tool to compress them- I used them on 1/4 inch plywood and they expanded very well, probably the plywood will break before they would fail. Anything thicker than 10 mm they may not expand properly and on thin sheetmetal they may not compress enough.
MIKE WHITEMAN
Reviewed in the United States on September 12, 2024
This was for replacing some rusted threads on the metal skid plate of my Jeep. A lot cheaper than the dealer quote.
Lawrence
Reviewed in the United States on September 10, 2024
I have a pneumatic rivet nut gun. These rivets fit it perfectly. They crush well and look more consistent than other rivet nuts I have used.Because I have a pneumatic gun, these are incredibly easy to use. I have no clue if they would be as easy with a hand tool. I don't have one to test.These rivets lock into place and stay where they're set. That is exactly the level of performance I was hoping to get. These are fairly priced considering the great way they perform. If you need to rivet in thicker material or several layers, these are a great option!
Stacy A.
Reviewed in the United States on September 1, 2024
These are good for softer material like abs plastic sheets. Standard nut serts easily pulls out of thin and/or softer material.
M. Ross
Reviewed in the United States on August 29, 2024
I admit I don't have an immediate need for these fasteners, but when you need something like this it's good to have them on hand. When do you need them? When you have a 'blind' area (like inside a square tube, pipe, or any structure where you can't access the far side of a fastener to attach a nut). These are basically tubular nuts with inside threads that you apply like a rivet, hence the terms "rivnut" and "nutsert" and "rivet nut".It's installed like a rivet, meaning it is crushed onto the surface of the material to make it permanently attached, then the internal threads allow you to screw in a screw or bolt without the need for a separate nut. There are special tools available to crush the rivnut so the head and the crushed shank squeeze it onto the material it's being applied to, but they can be also used with simple and cheap DIY setups. Just search YouTube if you don't know how to do it.These particular rivnuts have pre-scored shanks to make crushing them easier. They're made of zinc-coated carbon steel, so that should be helpful. The ones I ordered are for 1/4" bolts or screws, and they have a generous 1-1/16" shank (before crushing). That gives you lots of thread length, but makes them less useful in tight places where space is limited.Like conventional rivets, a hole must be drilled to accept the rivnut, and it's important to keep the hole diameter as close as possible to the shank diameter to avoid a loose fit. After that, it's a simple matter of placing the rivnut and crushing it into place.
David B
Reviewed in the United States on July 16, 2024
I like and use regular Rivet-Nuts and heard that these M8 Multi Grip Rivet Nuts would provide more surface area than regular Rivet-Nuts. I would not use these for thin metal.I always practice before I commit to using any of these nuts that get inserted inside a blind hole.I use a proper Nut Setting tool but I had to remove the guide on the tool so that the setting bolt could attach with enough threads so actually work.After the first full squeeze of the handles I was able to screw the guide back onto my tool and continue setting the nut.The 3 problems I had were................1. The inside of the nut widens quite a bit on the inside but leaves too much of a gap to tightly hold around thin metal. Loose is never good!2. The tee section can be moved around. Not fully applying the maximum holding area to the metal.3. If you use too much force with the tool the threads might become deformed.Now possibly if the metal/wood was thicker, these problems may not occur.
HardStart
Reviewed in the United States on December 12, 2024
Simple to install. Sized correctly.
Direwolf
Reviewed in the United States on October 4, 2024
After seeing rivet nuts used on something I was assembling, I realized how much better they are for certain fastening needs. Instead of a wood screw, you can use a bolt and rivet nut to hold your pieces together. It's neat, and allows you to fasten and unfasten parts together without wear or damage.The QXSKSLH M6 rivet nuts are springy so they can hold themselves firmly in the hole before attaching the other part. Note that these are available in different lengths, so be sure to measure the total thickness of the pieces you're attaching.
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