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Fill out the form below to receive our catalog and pricing.

Seismic bracing failures in MEP systems rarely trace back to a single bad part. They trace back to a selection process that treated bracing as a generic hardware add-on rather than a coordinated restraint assembly sized to a specific load…

Learn how to specify, install, and inspect seismic bracing for MEP pipe, duct, and cable tray routes in industrial and commercial projects.

Learn how to design, specify, install, and inspect seismic bracing for cable tray routes in industrial, data center, and MEP projects.

What Is Cable Tray Support Distance? Cable tray support distance is the center-to-center spacing between supports that a tray spans under a stated load, typically about 1.5 m to 3.0 m for standard systems. For buyers and specifiers, that number…

Cable tray clips are small retention components used in cable management systems to secure covers, dividers, bonding parts, accessories, or, in some cases, cables to a cable tray or cable ladder. They do not usually carry the primary tray load.…

Cable tray clamps are mechanical fasteners used to secure a cable tray, cable ladder, cover, splice plate, or cable bundle to the supporting structure. In real installations, they transfer dead load, vibration, uplift, thermal movement, and sometimes fault-related forces through…

Cable tray covers change three design conditions at once: protection, heat dissipation, and maintenance access. Under IEC 61537, a cover is not just an accessory; it changes what reaches the cables, how heat leaves the bundle, and how quickly technicians…

Cable tray covers are removable metal or nonmetal panels installed over a cable tray or cable ladder to reduce exposure to dust, falling debris, UV, and light weathering. Under IEC 61537, they change exposure, access, and thermal behavior; they do…