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Friction Guides: A Different Kind of Bold Movement
Other News Subscribe to FREE newsletter | Dec 05, 2017 |
Many folks know Accuride for its popular ball-bearing drawer slides, but now the company is expanding into another kind of movement: friction guides.
A traditional drawer slide, as well as a linear track system, use lubricated ball bearings to allow movement. But a friction guide allows movement from a self-lubricating carriage and rail without a need for ball bearings.
The Basics of a Friction Guide
Like a linear track system, a friction guide has only two main components:
- Carriage
- Rail
A user attaches an application, such as the extrusion nozzle of a 3D printer, to the carriage. The carriage then enables the application to move back-and-forth smoothly along a linear axis.
The Benefits of Using Friction Guides
- self-lubricating
- mechanically simple
- virtually maintenance-free
- easy to install
- corrosion-resistant
- quiet
- vibration-resistant
Friction guides, such as the Accuride FG115, can come in multiple guises.
Carriages come in:
- Non-Adjust, for when you don’t need to adjust movement or clearance. The clearance between sliding element and rail cannot be fine-tuned. This is a cost-effective solution for applications that don’t require high-level precision.
- Manual Adjust, for when you want to fine-tune for the perfect clearance or preload. Adjust the clearance/tension between the sliding elements and rail by Allen wrench.
- Auto-Adjust, for when you want constant preload force for the life of your system. Internal springs maintain constant and consistent tension between sliding elements and rail.
The simplicity and versatility of friction guides assure they’ll have a long life ahead.
Watch Accuride’s Marketing Manager, Claudia Tuttle, demonstrating the FG115!
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