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Address
304 North Cardinal
St. Dorchester Center, MA 02124
Work Hours
Monday to Friday: 7AM - 7PM
Weekend: 10AM - 5PM
As a thread strips, do you patch it or trust it to hold? You need inserts that match the material, the load, and the environment. That might mean restoring M8 threads with an E-Z LOK kit, securing hardwood with stainless wood inserts, or choosing nylon lock nuts for vibration prone assemblies. The right choice can make a weak joint behave like a permanent fix, but a few details still decide which one wins.
More Details on Our Top Picks
The E-Z LOK EZ-450-8 is a strong choice when you need fast metal thread repair. It includes a complete M8-1.25 kit with a drill, tap, and installation tool, so you can restore stripped holes quickly. The carbon steel, black oxide inserts reinforce soft metals such as aluminum, cast iron, and magnesium while resisting wear. Pre-applied adhesive activates during installation, helping each self-locking insert hold securely. With 25 pieces included, you can handle multiple repairs. The process is simple, the grip is strong, and the fit is reliable for tapped holes.
Best For Wood
View Latest PriceWhen you’re working with hardwood, these stainless steel inserts help hold threads where wood could strip. You get a 10 pack of E-Z Lok 400-4-CR inserts made from 18-8 stainless steel, and each one provides a 1/4″ – 20 internal thread in a 0.500″ body. The knife threads slice into oak, cherry, or maple, giving you strong bite and solid corrosion resistance. Use them in furniture, cabinets, or displays whenever you need durable, repeatable fastening. You can install them with a screwdriver, a bolt and jam nut, or the optional E-Z LOK drive tool for easier placement.
Need reliable fastening for multiple projects? Grab 20 pcs of 3/8-16 stainless steel nylock nuts as a handy spare supply. These silver SAE locknuts use standard inch threading and conform to ASME B18.16.6 for high precision. Their nylon insert helps resist loosening from vibration and torque, so your assembly stays tight. Made from 304 18-8 stainless steel, they are corrosion resistant, rust resistant, and built for outdoor use. Use them with bolts on engines, automotive parts, mechanical systems, and industrial equipment whenever you want durable, dependable holding power.
Best For Spark Plugs
View Latest PriceOEMTOOLS 25648 Fix-A-Thread inserts are ideal for spark plug thread repair. They help restore damaged cylinder heads, blown plugs, and stripped M14 x 1.25 threads without replacing major parts. The 18-8 stainless steel wire has a diamond shaped spring profile that locks securely, resists corrosion, and stands up to heat and vibration. You get six black oxide inserts in three lengths, so you can match common plug reaches in cars, trucks, RVs, and aviation work. Use the required thread insert tool for installation.
Best Metal Repair
View Latest PriceThe E-Z LOK 453-8 is ideal when you need durable metal thread repair without special tools. You get a 5-pack of 303 stainless steel inserts with M8-1.25 internal threads and M12x1.75 external threads, so you can restore stripped holes in aluminum, cast iron, magnesium, and similar soft metals. Because you install them with standard tools, you will not need special drills, taps, or drivers. Drill, tap, and turn the insert in with a screwdriver, bolt, jam nut, or drive tool. Its self-locking design helps you reinforce worn threads quickly and keep them secure.
Heavy-Duty Pick
View Latest PriceIf you need a heavy-duty option for repairing metal threads, E-Z LOK’s 12L14 steel inserts are a strong fit. This pack of five includes 1/2-13 internal, 3/4-10 external inserts that reinforce tapped holes, repair stripped threads, and reduce wear in aluminum, cast iron, or magnesium. Installation uses standard tools, drill, tap, and drive them in with a screwdriver, bolt and jam nut, or E-Z LOK drive tool. The pre-applied adhesive helps hold the insert during installation, and the flush-mount design helps seal against liquids and gas, even at pressures up to 6,000 psi.
Best Value Pack
View Latest PriceE-Z LOK’s 5-pack delivers strong value for repairing worn metal threads fast. You get 303 stainless steel inserts with 1/2″ – 13 internal threads, 3/4″ – 10 external threads, and a 0.656″ length. You can install them with a standard drill and tap, so you will not need special tools. The preapplied adhesive helps create a self-locking fit, and the insert’s solid construction suits aluminum, cast iron, and magnesium. In just 3 to 5 minutes, you can have a fastener-ready repair. Made in America, it is a practical fix you can trust.
Best For Repairs
View Latest PriceNeed to repair stripped 1/4″-20 threads fast? Use the E-Z LOK externally threaded insert, model 303-4, to restore metal holes and add lasting strength. It fits 1/4″-20 internal threads with a 7/16″-14 external thread, and you can install it with a standard drill, tap, screwdriver, bolt, and jam nut, or an optional drive tool. Made in the U.S. from 303 stainless steel, it works well in aluminum, stainless steel, cast iron, and magnesium. The self-locking adhesive helps resist vibration, reduces backout, and cures fully in 72 hours, sealing up to 6,000 psi.
Bulk Pack
View Latest PriceFTVOGUE’s 50-piece stainless steel insert set is a practical bulk pack for thread repairs. It includes M12 self-tapping metric inserts in a storage case, so each piece stays organized and ready to use. The stainless steel construction resists rust, wears slowly, and provides reliable toughness for repeated use. You can repair damaged threads quickly, improve screw stability, and increase vibration resistance with a single assembly tool. Its reusable design helps you work efficiently on fittings that require a strong, fine internal thread. This silver set is suitable for durable repairs.
Best Assortment
View Latest PriceIf you need a versatile fastener kit, this 191 pack gives you a smart assortment of stainless steel nylon insert lock nuts. You get seven sizes, from M3 to M10, neatly stored for quick selection. The nylon insert adds friction, so your nuts resist loosening under vibration in automotive, machinery, and repair work. Made from 304 18-8 stainless steel, they fight rust and corrosion while holding strength in harsh conditions. Clean cut threads and a polished finish help you install them smoothly, and they are handy for furniture, construction, DIY, and maintenance.
When choosing thread locking inserts, match the thread size and verify that the base material can support the load. Also compare the locking mechanism, review any installation tool requirements, and consider corrosion resistance for your environment.
Thread size compatibility starts with a precise match: the insert’s internal thread must fit the bolt or screw you plan to use, whether that’s M8 x 1.25, 1/4″ x 20, 3/8″ x 16, or M14 x 1.25, because even a slight pitch mismatch will stop proper engagement. You should also check the insert’s outside thread, since it has to fit the drilled and tapped hole as well. Confirm the thread standard before you buy, since metric and inch sizes are not interchangeable, even though they may look similar. Verify the required hole diameter and depth against the insert size so it seats fully. For repairs, choose an insert that restores the original fastener thread instead of oversizing the hole, and you will keep the repair compatible with standard hardware.
Base metal matters because the insert should match the strength of the material it reinforces. If you are working with softer metals such as aluminum, cast iron, or magnesium, choose an insert that strengthens tapped holes and helps prevent stripping. Check the insert’s shear strength as well; higher ratings, such as 540 MPa (79 ksi), can better resist pull-out and thread failure under load. For repairs in wear-prone or heavy-duty parts, select materials with solid hardness and toughness, such as stainless steel or carbon steel, so threads last longer. When the assembly faces repeated use or vibration, choose a combination that keeps clamping force steady. In load-bearing repairs, select inserts that distribute stress evenly so the parent material does not crack, deform, or fail early.
Just as the base metal sets the strength target, the locking mechanism determines how well the insert stays in place in service. You can choose a pre-applied adhesive insert whenever you need a self-locking bond that forms during installation and resists vibration-driven loosening. If your assembly needs more mechanical retention, look for a diamond-shaped wire thread or a nylon insert that adds friction and holds the fastener more tightly. Nylon insert locknuts work well when motion and torque keep trying to unwind the joint. In some cases, sealing is also important, since certain adhesive-backed inserts can block liquids and gases and withstand up to 6,000 psi once fully cured. Match the mechanism to your load, metal, vibration, and sealing requirements.
Installation tool needs can make or break the choice of thread locking insert, so check whether you can use standard tools like a drill, tap, screwdriver, or bolt-and-jam-nut setup, or whether you will need a dedicated drive tool. Some inserts install with no special tools, while others need a specific kit to seat them correctly. Match the tool requirement to the thread size and hole prep, because some systems call for a drill plus tap, and others are self-tapping and need only one assembly tool. Also weigh whether you are doing a simple turn-in install or a more specialized process, since that changes speed, consistency, and ease of repair. When you will repeat installations, a system with the drill, tap, and driver included can save setup time and help you get the same result every time.
Once you’ve matched the insert to your install tool, the next thing to check is how well it will hold up in the environment it will be used in. If you’re working in humid, outdoor, or chemically exposed settings, choose stainless steel, especially 18-8 or 304 grades, because they resist rust far better than plain carbon steel. A black oxide or phosphate finish can help, but it will not replace a corrosion-resistant base metal. Good resistance keeps threads cleaner, preserves engagement, and helps prevent seizure, galling, and poor locking over time. If water, salt, or temperature swings are part of the job, pick an alloy that can handle them. For metal repairs, this matters even more when the parent material is softer, since the insert may outlast the hole it reinforces.
When a joint must handle real load and constant motion, choose a thread locking insert with enough shear and pull out strength for the job, since ratings can vary widely from about 540 MPa (79 ksi) for stronger metal inserts to much lower values for lighter duty types. In vibration prone assemblies, use self locking designs with adhesive or a nylon locking element to keep threads from backing out. For high vibration service, make sure the insert fully engages the parent material and that you use the correct drill and tap size so the load spreads evenly and threads do not strip. If repeated shock or oscillation is expected, pick corrosion resistant materials like stainless steel, and confirm the insert can survive your actual vibration, temperature, and sustained load conditions.
To get the right fit, match the insert’s internal and external thread sizes exactly to your bolt and host hole, whether that is M8x1.25, 1/4″-20, or M14x1.25, so you get proper engagement and load transfer. Then check insert length and groove diameter against your material thickness and hole geometry; too short, and it cannot hold, too large, and it can block proper seating. Pick an insert made for the base material too. Aluminum, cast iron, and magnesium often call for self-locking metal inserts, while wood usually needs knife-thread styles. For joints that see vibration or service, choose a locking design that will not back out. When heat, corrosion, or pressure matter, verify the material and sealing rating, such as stainless steel or 6,000 psi capability.