Back

3" x 1-1/4" Casters & Wheels

Most of the equipment that lives in this size doesn’t look industrial. Medical carts. Audio-visual stands. Office mailroom rigs. Small toolbox builds. Lab instrument trolleys. Light-duty service kits. The 3 x 1-1/4 size hides in plain sight under thousands of pieces of equipment that quietly need to roll silently across vinyl tile, polished concrete, or carpeted office floor.

What the 3 x 1-1/4 size actually does

This is the smallest caster size that comfortably crosses the threshold from “office furniture caster” into “light-industrial caster.” Anything smaller (2 x 1, 2 x 7/8) is designed for the desk chair, the rolling tote, the document trolley. Anything larger (4 x 1-1/4, 4 x 1-1/2) is openly industrial. The 3 x 1-1/4 sits in the gap: small enough to fit under a hospital infusion pump cart, big enough to be rated for a 1,250 lb medical equipment rack.

The 1-1/4-inch tread is the detail that matters. A 3-inch wheel with a 1-inch tread is a furniture caster; the same diameter with a 1-1/4-inch tread spreads point load enough to qualify as light-industrial. That extra quarter inch of tread width is why this size shows up under hospital beds, lab instruments, and toolboxes where a furniture caster would dent the floor or fail at 600 lb.

Tread material choices, ranked by what actually gets ordered

Polyurethane on polyolefin core is the volume winner. 300 to 700 lb capacity depending on swivel geometry, non-marking, quiet on vinyl tile and polished concrete, runs about 60% of the price of premium poly. This is the build that lives under most hospital, lab, and office equipment.

Polyurethane on aluminum core climbs to 1,250 lb. Picked when the cart has to carry something heavier than the cart itself — an MRI patient transfer board, a small CNC mill, a stack of dies for a stamping press. The aluminum core adds maybe 15-20% to the price but the capacity nearly doubles.

Thermo-urethane (the gray TPR variant) lives in healthcare and lab applications where chemical splash resistance is mandatory. Less capacity than standard polyurethane (typically capped at 250-400 lb in this size) but the chemical resistance buys it the niche.

Stainless steel construction is the corrosive-environment build. Same wheel options but everything metal in the rigging is 304 stainless. Common on pharmaceutical and lab carts that get washdown.

What about steel or phenolic in this size?Both exist but neither wins for the typical 3 x 1-1/4 use case. Steel rolls hard, marks the floor, and is heavier than the rest of the cart. Phenolic is hard, brittle, and noisy on tile. Both have their place at larger sizes (6 x 2, 8 x 2) but the 3 x 1-1/4 size is dominated by polyurethane variants.

Common applications — where the 3 x 1-1/4 wheel lives

Hospital infusion pump carts and IV stands. Medical instrument carts (anesthesia, imaging, surgical). Hospital food service carts. Laboratory analytical instrument trolleys. Audio-visual equipment stands and presentation carts. Office mailroom and copy room carts. Small toolbox kits and mechanic’s rolling cabinets. Light service carts in retail back-of-house. Display fixtures with mobility built in.

What unifies the list: the equipment is lighter than the people who push it, the floor is finished (not industrial concrete), and quiet rolling matters more than maximum capacity. That’s why polyurethane wins this size category.

Need a different size? See 3″ x 1″ casters (lighter), 4″ x 1-1/4″ casters (heavier), or browse all polyurethane wheels.

Common 3 x 1-1/4 questions

What’s the typical bore size?3/8-inch precision ball bearing is the standard. Some heavier-duty 3 x 1-1/4 builds use 1/2-inch bore for 1,000+ lb capacity. Confirm bore before swapping wheels between rigging.
Will these fit a standard top plate?Most 3 x 1-1/4 casters use a 2-3/8 x 3-5/8 plate or a 3-1/8 x 4-1/8 plate. Threaded-stem variants are common for furniture and equipment retrofits.
Polyurethane on polyolefin vs. polyurethane on aluminum — what’s the real difference?Polyolefin core is plastic. Aluminum core is metal. The aluminum doesn’t flex under load — that’s how capacity jumps from ~700 lb to 1,250 lb at the same wheel diameter.
Can I get total-lock brake in this size?Yes. Total-lock locks both the wheel and the swivel simultaneously — standard option in the 3 x 1-1/4 size for hospital and lab carts.
Stainless steel — is the wheel stainless too?No. The rigging (top plate, kingpin, hardware) is 304 stainless. The wheel is usually polyurethane on a polyolefin or aluminum core. Stainless-clad wheels exist but at significant cost.
Spec the right 3 x 1-1/4 build
Tell us the equipment, the floor, and the load per caster. We’ll match the right tread + rigging.
Call 844-439-4335

Search