Members wlg190861 Posted February 27, 2015 Members Report Posted February 27, 2015 I am looking for stainless steel collar spikes. Do they make stainless steel spikes and if so where can I find them. Looking for 1" spikes. Thank you Dan Quote
Members TIMCO now SX Posted March 2, 2015 Members Report Posted March 2, 2015 Can't say I've seen Stainless Steel. We produce that spike in Zinc cast (never rust). Strong 8-32 thread . www.sxindustries.com Quote
Members wlg190861 Posted March 3, 2015 Author Members Report Posted March 3, 2015 I go to your website an fill out form for a catalog & price list an I push send an all I get is ( 404 Error page ) Quote
Members maddhatter Posted March 4, 2015 Members Report Posted March 4, 2015 check out ohio travel bag they carry spikes how ever im not sure what they are constructed from Quote
Members vunm Posted March 6, 2015 Members Report Posted March 6, 2015 we make make them in zinc alloy or brass,in face,it can make with steel too, but the price expensive. we are manufacturer of harware for leather/textile in china, please tell me how many pcs you want, sale@kingcamry.com Quote
Members TIMCO now SX Posted March 10, 2015 Members Report Posted March 10, 2015 Dan, Got your PM and will rush catalog with samples today ! Thanks! Tim www.sxindustries.com Quote
Members leatherman64 Posted March 31, 2015 Members Report Posted March 31, 2015 Weaver has 1" spikes in nickel over brass. nice spikes. Quote
Members Monoxide101 Posted May 27, 2015 Members Report Posted May 27, 2015 I've ordered from studsandspikes.com before. Huge selection, much larger than your typical leather supply, but no stainless. Nickel over brass I believe. Quote
Members bkm Posted May 27, 2015 Members Report Posted May 27, 2015 A plated product is going to be inferior where abrasion occurs. It would be simple to machine spikes from rod stock on a lathe. Zinc and brass (which is copper and zinc) would definitely be easier to machine which is why those materials are most likely to be found. With the right tool, you could machine stainless steel spikes. Stainless steel would be the best white metal. It won't take or keep the polish of nickel-plate with chrome, but it will last longer. There are different alloys of stainless steel. 304 (also called 18/8) is easy to machine, highly corrosion resistant, readily accepts a polish, and is easy to find. With 304 rod, use a carbide cutter and a pattern or cnc program to turn out spikes on a lathe. With that said, I have to say I despise the aesthetic of spiked collars. I understand they had a practical purpose to protect unsupervised livestock protection dogs from wolves, but that is hardly ever their purpose today. They are poor protection for a modern pet or working dog which should be supervised and protected from attacks from other dogs by the handler. It is more a matter of my subjective opinion, but I hate wide leather collars with or without spikes. I think the wide collars are uncomfortable and inhibit mobility, and leather is an unsanitary material for collars. Quote
Members DoubleC Posted May 29, 2015 Members Report Posted May 29, 2015 I hope you're going to use the horrid things on a human collar and not a dog collar. Cheryl Quote
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