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5/8" x 5" Stainless Steel Wedge Anchor Bolts (12 Pack) - Heavy Duty Concrete Anchors for Masonry, Construction & DIY Projects

$41.24 $54.99 -25% OFF

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Description

HROMIGRY Heavy Duty Wedge Concrete Anchors Our wedge anchor bolts for concrete are available in diameters of 1/4", 3/8", 1/2", 5/8", 3/4", 1" and are available in zinc plated carbon steel and stainless steel to make the through bolt resistant to rust. INSTALLATION INSTRUCTIONS Using the hammer drill to drill a hole in the concrete, which is as big as the diameter of the wedge anchor. Clean out all the dust and debris of the hole. Hammer the anchor into the drilled hole to the desired depth. Tighten the nut with a torque wrench to ensure the bottom portion wedge is expanded in order to lock the anchor in place firmly. 5/8"x5", 50 Pcs 5/8"x5", 25 Pcs 5/8"x6", 25 Pcs 5/8"x7", 25 Pcs 5/8"x5", 25 Pcs Add to Cart Buying Options Add to Cart Add to Cart Add to Cart Customer Reviews 4.6 out of 5 stars 14 5.0 out of 5 stars 19 4.6 out of 5 stars 14 4.9 out of 5 stars 13 5.0 out of 5 stars 7 Price $79.99$79.99 — $47.99$47.99 $49.99$49.99 $92.99$92.99 Material Zinc Plated Carbon Steel Zinc Plated Carbon Steel Zinc Plated Carbon Steel Zinc Plated Carbon Steel Stainless Steel INSTALLATION TIPS: 1. Be sure to drill the hole straight. 2. Thread nut to the desired depth before hammering to avoid damaging the thread and knocking too deep. 3. Once the anchor is inserted, it will not be easily removed due to the expansion clip. 4. Choose the right size drill bit, drill the hole that is the same diameter as the anchor, larger hole may cause the bolt to rotate during tightening. 5. You can drill the hole slightly deeper than the entire length of the anchor, so that if you want to remove the anchored item later you can hammer the anchor down into the hole.

Features

    Anchor Bolts Specifications - Diameter - 5/8", Length - 5", Qty - 12 pieces, Minimum Embedment - 2-3/4", Thread Length - 2-7/8", Pull Out Load - 12787 lbf

    Heavy Duty Material - Our cement anchor bolts are made of premium stainless steel, durable and corrosion resistance for long using

    Ideal Applications - Concrete anchor bolts work well for any mounting and structural anchorage purpose in any condition, suitable for applications in solid concrete and cement, Do not use in block or brick base material

    Great Choice - Wedge anchor bolts for concrete are professionaly designed for both indoor and outdoor use. Must be inserted for minimum embedment depth to obtain minimum holding values, and comes assembled with nut & washer for your convenience

    Easy to Use - Just drill a hole as big as the diameter of the anchor in concrete (larger holes may cause the bolt to spin when tightening) , remove debris and dust from the hole, hammer the concrete wedge anchors into the hole, then tighten the nut with a wrench to complete the installation

Reviews

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- Verified Buyer
The idea behind a wedge anchor is that you shove something down a tight hole that expands at the bottom and holds the whole anchor in place. No adhesive or concrete is needed. If the material you drill into is crumbly, soft, or weak a wedge anchor is a poor choice since it will have nothing secure to bite into when it expands. Most wedge anchors I've used were not made of stainless steel and they worked fine. However, I had an installation close to a spa with external fountain that would routinely get wet. I didn't want the anchors to corrode away and make a problem in the future.The manufacturer's video shows the four step process for installation, in a panel at its end. Do not drill a hole bigger in diameter than needed because expansion at the bottom is not forgiving - you only get so much and then there is no grip to be had. I use an SDS hammerdrill and work carefully to drill straight and on-center so the hole doesn't widen as I go. The hole has to be deep enough to accept some of the threaded section of the anchor since the anchor will be lifted back out of the hole as the nut is tightened. The deep end will snag from having been tapped in with a hammer, and as the nut is turned the deep end of the anchor mushrooms out to make the secured physical connection. The rest of the anchor is not tight with the hole you just drilled, so water and dirt can get in. I like to partially fill the hole with silicone so it gets sealed from the top. The threaded part of the other end of the anchor will stick out past the nut. With threadlock compound on the threads of the nut I don't get concerned the nut will back off and I cut or grind the excess thread off for a cleaner installation. Of course, the nut and washer are on top of what is being anchored down, and the threaded end of the anchor is put through a mounting hole before the washer and nut go on.This is where you have to be careful. If the substrate, probably concrete, has rebar or metal mesh, or if what you are securing is other than stainless steel, where two dissimilar metals touch you will set up an electrolytic cell. Being in a wet area, that cell will be active for the life of the installation. (Not in a wet area? Then why did you use a stainless steel anchor?). Electrical current will be created and flow between the metals and across the moisture, electrolysis will occur, the stainless steel will survive, but the rebar or the equipment you are securing will corrode to a powder. In other situations it may be good enough to coat or paint where the dissimilar metals touch so no water can reach it and no current will be creatd and flow. However, in a wet area, especially on concrete or masonry, water will diffuse through the substrate and will always be present even if you paint or coat the physical connection. Don't mix metals. If you are securing a galvanized steel framework, get a carbon steel wedge anchor. If you're securing stainless steel equipment, use this stainless steel wedge anchor.Used in the right application and installed properly, this concrete anchor is very good. It is priced well, too.