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To learn more about our privacy policy Click hereWhether it is a 1" ratchet buckle or 2" ratchet buckle, these are relatively common in our daily lives. So everyone knows that the ratchet buckle is safe, let's take a look at its structural features.
The safety release structure of the ratchet buckle consists of a main body and a handle connected to the shaft pivot. The main body is mainly provided with a sliding groove and a sliding member corresponding to the stopper of the handle. The groove is located on one of the grooves, and the side surface is a guide slope. When the handle is turned to make the plug enter the chute, the raised part can push the lock to release the ratchet, and the belt body can drive the reaction force of the belt to release the tension of the belt body and interact with the ratchet. When the slider engaged by the driver moves to the guide slope of the chute, it will synchronously drive the convex part to rotate, thereby rotating the shaft and the ratchet. The longer stop is close to the stop, so the hook engages again. Limit the rotation of the shaft so that the shaft can only rotate a small angle at a time, so that the tension of the belt body can be released in sections, thereby obtaining the effect of safely releasing the belt body.
There is much more to be said about the structural characteristics of the 2" ratchet buckle safety release belt, so anyone interested in this aspect, no matter what should know more.
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