Introduction
Standard parts — fasteners, bearings, seals, linear guides, pneumatic cylinders — are the building blocks of mechanical design. Selecting and using them effectively reduces design time, lowers cost, and improves reliability compared to custom-designed components.
What Are Standard Parts?
Standard parts fall into two categories:
- Standards-body parts: Defined by ISO, JIS, DIN, or ASME standards. Bolts, nuts, washers, keys, pins, O-rings. Interchangeable between suppliers.
- Catalog parts: Designed and sold by specific manufacturers (THK linear guides, SMC pneumatics, Misumi shafts). Defined by manufacturer catalogs, not standards bodies.
Why Use Standard Parts?
| Benefit | Detail |
|---|---|
| Cost reduction | Mass-produced parts are dramatically cheaper than custom machined parts |
| Faster design | No need to design, draw, or qualify the part from scratch |
| Proven reliability | Manufacturers provide load ratings, service life, and application data |
| Easy replacement | Standard parts are available from multiple suppliers; spares are accessible |
Selection Process
- Define requirements: load, speed, stroke, environment (temperature, humidity, cleanliness)
- Select part type: choose category (bearing, guide, actuator, etc.)
- Size to requirements: use manufacturer catalog selection guides; apply safety factors
- Check envelope and mounting: confirm the part fits in available space and mounting interfaces match
- Specify completely on drawing: manufacturer, catalog number, and quantity
Common Standard Part Families
- Fasteners: Hex bolts (ISO 4014/4017), socket head cap screws (ISO 4762), hex nuts (ISO 4032)
- Linear guides: THK, NSK, Hiwin — specify series, size, length, preload class
- Ball screws: THK, NSK — specify diameter, lead, length, nut type
- Pneumatic cylinders: SMC, CKD, Festo — specify bore, stroke, mounting style
- Couplings: Misumi, KHK — flexible jaw, beam, oldham; specify shaft diameters and torque rating
Cost Comparison: Standard vs. Custom
| Item | Standard Part (catalog) | Custom Machined |
|---|---|---|
| Linear guide rail 500 mm | ~$30–80 | $200–500+ |
| Pneumatic cylinder | ~$20–100 | $300–1000+ |
| M10 hex bolt (each) | < $0.50 | $5–20+ |
FAQ
Q. How do I call out a catalog part on a drawing?
A. In the parts list (BOM): part number = manufacturer part number, description = catalog description, quantity = number required. On assembly drawings, use a balloon number pointing to the part and reference it in the BOM. For parts with critical installation dimensions, add a note pointing to the catalog drawing or datasheet.
Q. What if the standard part doesn’t quite fit my design?
A. First try adapting your design to fit the standard part — this is almost always cheaper than adapting the part. If the standard part truly cannot work, evaluate semi-standard options (modified catalog parts) before committing to full custom design.
Q. How do I compare standard parts from different manufacturers?
A. Compare load ratings, accuracy class, and mounting dimensions. For precision parts (linear guides, ball screws), accuracy grade (C3, C5, C7 for ball screws; grade H for guides) is critical. For commodity items like cylinders, compare force output, seal type, and port configuration.



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