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316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchors

What are 316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchors? 316 stainless steel wedge anchors are mechanical concrete anchors used to secure fixtures, brackets, equipment, supports, railings, base plates, and other components into solid concrete. They expand inside a drilled hole as the nut is tightened and are commonly used where the application needs a strong permanent concrete anchor with higher corrosion resistance for marine, coastal, outdoor, or more demanding environments.

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Wedge Anchors, Stainless Steel 316, 1/2"-13
Diameter: 1/2"

From $6.53*
Wedge Anchors, Stainless Steel 316, 1/4"-20
Diameter: 1/4"

From $1.90*
Wedge Anchors, Stainless Steel 316, 3/4"-10
Diameter: 3/4"

From $19.53*
Wedge Anchors, Stainless Steel 316, 3/8"-16
Diameter: 3/8"

From $3.14*
Wedge Anchors, Stainless Steel 316, 5/8"-11
Diameter: 5/8"

From $10.96*

Why Choose 316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchors?

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are useful when a fixture needs to be fastened securely into solid concrete and the environment calls for a more corrosion-resistant stainless steel anchor. They are often selected for marine, coastal, outdoor, washdown, chemical-adjacent, and moisture-exposed concrete anchoring applications where 316 stainless steel is preferred over general-purpose stainless or plated steel.

This category includes 316 stainless steel wedge anchors in common inch diameters. They are commonly selected for concrete fastening jobs where the installer needs an expansion-style anchor with a threaded stud, nut, washer, and 316 stainless steel material for the application.

Common Uses for 316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchors

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are commonly used for fastening brackets, equipment bases, guardrails, handrails, railing posts, machinery, sign posts, structural supports, base plates, fixtures, and other components to solid concrete.

They are often used in construction, maintenance, facilities, commercial, industrial, outdoor, marine-adjacent, and corrosive environment applications. Wedge anchors are intended for concrete anchoring and should be matched to the concrete condition, hole size, embedment, edge distance, spacing, and load requirements of the job.

How Wedge Anchors Work in Concrete

Wedge anchors are installed into a pre-drilled hole in solid concrete. As the nut is tightened, the wedge clip expands against the wall of the hole, helping the anchor grip the concrete and hold the attached fixture in place.

Proper installation matters. The hole needs to be drilled to the correct diameter and depth, cleaned before installation, and the anchor must be tightened according to the project requirements. Always follow the manufacturer’s installation instructions for hole depth, minimum embedment, spacing, edge distance, and torque.

316 Stainless Steel vs 18-8 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchors

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are commonly chosen for marine, coastal, chemical, salt, washdown, or more corrosive environments where stronger stainless steel corrosion resistance is preferred. They are a good choice when the anchor may be exposed to moisture, salt air, or harsher service conditions.

18-8 stainless steel wedge anchors are commonly used for general-purpose stainless concrete anchoring where corrosion resistance is needed, but the environment is less aggressive. Choose the stainless grade based on exposure conditions, fixture material, project specifications, and the level of corrosion resistance required.

316 Stainless Steel vs Zinc Plated Wedge Anchors

316 stainless steel wedge anchors provide better corrosion resistance than zinc plated steel wedge anchors and are often selected for outdoor or more demanding environments. They are also useful when the project calls for stainless material compatibility.

Zinc plated wedge anchors are often used for dry indoor concrete fastening or less corrosive environments where a plated steel anchor is suitable. Choose the anchor material based on the environment, exposure level, fixture material, and project requirements.

316 Stainless Steel vs Hot Dip Galvanized Wedge Anchors

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are often preferred when stainless steel material and stronger corrosion resistance are required, especially around marine, coastal, salt, chemical, or washdown exposure.

Hot dip galvanized wedge anchors are commonly selected for outdoor concrete fastening where a galvanized steel anchor is suitable. Choose between 316 stainless steel and hot dip galvanized anchors based on the environment, mating materials, corrosion requirements, and project specifications.

Wedge Anchors vs Sleeve Anchors

Wedge anchors are commonly used for fastening into solid concrete and are often selected when a strong, permanent expansion anchor is needed. They expand at the bottom portion of the anchor as the nut is tightened.

Sleeve anchors can be used in concrete, brick, and block in many applications, depending on the anchor style and manufacturer instructions. Choose the anchor type based on the base material, load requirements, fixture thickness, installation conditions, and whether the application is solid concrete, hollow block, brick, or another masonry material.

Wedge Anchors vs Drop-In Anchors

Wedge anchors provide a threaded stud that protrudes above the concrete surface after installation. They are often used when the fixture is placed over the anchor and secured with a nut and washer.

Drop-in anchors are internally threaded anchors installed flush inside concrete. They are commonly used with bolts or threaded rod when a flush anchor point is preferred. Choose between wedge anchors and drop-in anchors based on whether the application needs a protruding stud or an internally threaded anchor.

How to Choose the Right 316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchor

Choose the wedge anchor based on the required diameter, length, fixture thickness, embedment depth, concrete condition, spacing, edge distance, load requirements, and exposure environment. The anchor diameter should match the drilled hole size specified for the anchor.

After confirming the size and installation requirements, choose 316 stainless steel when the application needs a stainless concrete anchor for marine, coastal, salt, chemical, washdown, or more corrosive environments. For general-purpose stainless concrete anchoring in less aggressive environments, compare 18-8 stainless steel wedge anchors.

Related Anchor Categories

Browse related anchor categories to compare wedge anchors, stainless steel anchors, zinc plated anchors, hot dip galvanized anchors, sleeve anchors, drop-in anchors, screw anchors, and concrete fastening options.

316 Stainless Steel Wedge Anchor FAQs

What are 316 stainless steel wedge anchors?

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are mechanical expansion anchors used to fasten fixtures, brackets, supports, equipment, and other components into solid concrete.

When should I use 316 stainless steel wedge anchors?

Use 316 stainless steel wedge anchors when fastening into solid concrete in marine, coastal, outdoor, washdown, chemical-adjacent, salt-exposed, or more corrosive environments where 316 stainless steel is preferred.

Can wedge anchors be used in brick or block?

Wedge anchors are intended for solid concrete. For brick, block, or hollow masonry applications, compare sleeve anchors, masonry screws, or other anchors designed for the specific base material.

What is the difference between 316 and 18-8 stainless steel wedge anchors?

316 stainless steel wedge anchors are commonly used for more corrosive environments such as marine, coastal, salt, chemical, or washdown exposure. 18-8 stainless steel wedge anchors are commonly used for general-purpose stainless concrete anchoring in less aggressive environments.

What is the difference between 316 stainless steel and zinc plated wedge anchors?

316 stainless steel wedge anchors provide better corrosion resistance than zinc plated steel anchors. Zinc plated wedge anchors are often used for dry indoor or less corrosive concrete fastening applications.

How do wedge anchors hold in concrete?

Wedge anchors expand inside a drilled hole as the nut is tightened. The expansion clip presses against the concrete, helping secure the anchor and attached fixture.

How do I choose the right wedge anchor size?

Choose the wedge anchor based on the anchor diameter, length, fixture thickness, required embedment, concrete condition, spacing, edge distance, load requirements, and exposure environment.