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Transfer contours, patterns, and shapes for applications such as fitting floor tile and installing pipe insulation.
Probes take the shape of a pipe joint so you can transfer the exact outline to the pipe before you cut.
Lay out pipe and structural steel for any type or size of pipe fitting—elbows, tees, and wyes of all angles.
Align the level to find and mark the vertical center of curved surfaces.
Locate and mark the centerline on rods, tubes, and pipes, lay out keyways, and establish angles for connections.
Find the center of square and round materials, such as structural framing and pipe, and determine setup angles on milling machines and grinders.
Trace specialty symbols for pipe fitting, electrical work, plumbing, and more.
Glow-in-the-dark vials are easy to read in low light.
These brightly-colored levels are easy to spot.
One of the horizontal vials is a pitch gauge that reads slope in 1/8" increments.
These levels come with a calibration certificate traceable to NIST that states they've passed a test for accuracy.
With a precision-machined leveling surface and highly sensitive vial, this level provides superior accuracy.
A thumb screw secures to the end of your pipe or conduit to ensure accuracy when bending.
Line up two pipe flanges and determine pipe angle with the included nut-and bolt pins, level, and protractor.
Each step on these aligner pins matches common bolt holes on pipe flanges, so they're more precise than conical aligner pins and don’t require nuts. Press the pair of pins into mated flanges to make sure the flanges are aligned.
Insert a pair of these nut-and bolt pins into adjacent flange holes and tighten to align flanges before connecting two pipes.
Ensure horizontal alignment of pipe flanges with a level rod that runs between two alignment pins.
Replace your try square, miter square, depth gauge, marking gauge, 90° level, ruler, and scriber with one tool.
A titanium coating protects the blade against scratches and wear.
Replace your try square, miter square, depth gauge, height gauge, center-point finder, and level. The blade on these squares meets Fed. Spec. GGG-R-791H, which establishes uniform standards for accuracy, graduations, and size.
Use these blades with Starrett High-Accuracy Combination Square Heads. They meet Fed. Spec. GGG-R-791H, which establishes uniform standards for accuracy, graduations, and size.
Attach to Starrett High-Accuracy Combination Square Blades with the included lockbolts.
Use these squares in place of your try square, miter square, depth gauge, height gauge, center-point finder, and level.
Blades are for use with High-Accuracy Combination Square Heads.
Attach to High-Accuracy Combination Square Blades with the included lockbolts.
Pipe fitting sizes and welding charts are shown on this square in wear-resistant etched markings.
Measure outer diameter and mark lines around pipe.
Wrap these pocket-size tape measures around pipe and fittings to determine size.
Connect heavy and difficult-to-position gasketed pipe by yourself—no need for powered equipment. Chains align the pipe and the lever forces one pipe into the socket end of another.
Seal press-connect fittings onto steel and stainless steel pipe without threading or welding. Slide the tubing into a fitting and use these tools to crimp the connection.
Use this clamp with your 1/2" chuck capacity drill and a hole saw to cut notches in pipe and tubing to make intersecting connections.