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Ergonomic Casters — Easy-Roll Industrial Cart Wheels

Ergonomic casters — Hamilton Ergo-Tech and Ergo-Glide polyurethane wheel casters engineered to reduce operator push force by 30-50% vs standard caster wheels. Donut-tread profile + 87A or 85A durometer + sealed precision ball bearings. Specified across hospital, warehouse, and assembly applications where operator strain is a documented injury risk. 3-1/2″ to 8″ wheel sizes, 600-4,400 lb capacity. Stocked at our Mansfield, TX facility.

Hamilton Ergo-Tech & Ergo-Glide 30-50% Less Push Force Sealed Precision Bearings 3.5"–8" Diameter 600–4,400 lb Capacity

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Ergonomic Caster Series Comparison

Hamilton Ergo-Tech (87A) for general ergonomic carts. Ergo-Glide (85A) for heavier carts. Ergo-Glide XT for extra-heavy-duty applications.

Series Wheel Capacity Push Force Reduction Best For
Ergo-Tech (Donut Tread) 87A Poly on Aluminum 600–800 lb ~50% vs standard Hospital service carts, light assembly
Ergo-Glide 85A Poly on Aluminum 1,000 lb ~40% vs standard Medium-duty operator-pushed carts
Ergo-Glide XT 85A Poly on Cast Iron 2,100–4,400 lb ~30% vs standard Heavy assembly carts, warehouse
Ergo-Tech Spinfinity Kingpinless 87A Poly on Aluminum 600–800 lb ~50% vs standard High-cycle hospital + maintenance-free
Workhorse Rigid Ergo-Tech 87A Poly on Aluminum 600 lb Pair with swivel Straight-line stability + ergonomics

How to Choose

1. Match Wheel Series to Capacity

Light service (chair, lab, hospital): Ergo-Tech 87A. Medium (warehouse, prep carts): Ergo-Glide 85A. Heavy (assembly fixtures, parts carts): Ergo-Glide XT 85A on cast iron. Going lighter than required wastes capacity; going heavier loses ergonomic benefit.

2. Single vs Dual Wheel

Single wheel up to 1,000 lb (Ergo-Glide). Dual wheel for 2,100-4,400 lb (Ergo-Glide XT). Dual wheel doubles capacity in the same physical footprint, important for assembly carts that must fit in standard cart locations.

3. Kingpinless or Standard?

Kingpinless (Spinfinity) eliminates the swivel pin failure point. Specified for 24/7 hospital, warehouse, and assembly carts. Costs ~25% more but lasts 5-10x longer in high-cycle service. Spinfinity is "maintenance-free" — sealed bearings, no greasing required.

4. Cart Layout (Swivel + Rigid)

For ergonomic carts: 2 swivel front + 2 rigid rear gives steering stability. All-swivel maximizes maneuverability in tight workspaces but reduces tracking. Most assembly carts use 2+2 configuration.

Engineer Tip: OSHA push/pull guidance flags carts requiring >50 lb operator force as ergonomic risk. Standard 5" polyurethane casters on a 1,500 lb cart can require 80-100 lb push force from rest. Hamilton Ergo-Glide 85A casters on the same cart: 40-55 lb push force. The upgrade typically pays back in <1 year on workers' comp risk reduction alone.

Frequently Asked Questions

What makes a caster ergonomic?

Three factors: (1) softer durometer polyurethane (85A-87A vs standard 95A) absorbs floor imperfections instead of transmitting them as push resistance, (2) larger contact patch (donut tread) distributes load and reduces start-up force, (3) sealed precision ball bearings (vs cheaper plain bearings) cut rolling friction. Combined, ergonomic casters reduce push force by 30-50% vs standard.

How much does an ergonomic caster reduce operator push force?

30-50% reduction vs standard 95A polyurethane casters of the same diameter. On a 1,500 lb cart, that's typically the difference between 80-100 lb push force and 40-55 lb — the OSHA ergonomic risk threshold.

What is Hamilton Ergo-Tech vs Ergo-Glide?

Ergo-Tech: 87A polyurethane donut tread on aluminum hubs, lighter-duty ergonomic series (600-800 lb). Ergo-Glide: 85A poly on aluminum (medium-duty, 1,000 lb) or cast iron (heavy-duty Ergo-Glide XT, 2,100-4,400 lb). Pick by capacity; both deliver similar ergonomic benefit at their respective load tiers.

Do ergonomic casters cost more?

Yes — typically 30-50% more than standard 95A polyurethane casters. The cost premium pays back in workers' compensation insurance reductions, fewer ergonomic injuries, and longer wheel life (softer compounds wear slightly slower under shock loads).

Are these casters non-marking?

Yes. Hamilton Ergo-Tech and Ergo-Glide polyurethane treads are non-marking on commercial flooring, vinyl, hardwood, and concrete. Safe for hospital corridors, assembly floors, and any finished commercial surface.

What is "Spinfinity" / "Maintenance-Free"?

Hamilton Spinfinity is the maintenance-free kingpinless line — sealed swivel raceway plus sealed precision ball bearings means no greasing required for the life of the caster. Specified where caster maintenance is impractical (24/7 service, contamination-sensitive labs, hard-to-access cart corners).

Can I retrofit ergonomic casters to existing carts?

Yes — if your cart top plate matches Hamilton standard plate sizes (4" x 4-1/2" or 2-3/8" x 3-5/8") and your cart capacity is within the ergonomic caster's rating. We recommend retrofitting all 4 casters at once to maintain even cart height and consistent rolling effort.

How do I justify ergonomic casters to procurement?

The math: OSHA ergonomic injury cost averages $35,000-$85,000 per claim. Workers' comp insurance loads typically run 1-3% of payroll. A 1% rate reduction on a 50-person team pays for ergonomic upgrades on every cart in the facility within 18 months. Document push-force testing on your existing carts vs the ergonomic upgrade as justification.

Hamilton AuthorizedFull Ergo-Tech, Ergo-Glide, and Ergo-Glide XT line stocked. Cross-reference and ergonomic sizing support.
OSHA Push-Force Compliant30-50% push force reduction vs standard casters — brings most carts under OSHA ergonomic risk thresholds.
Same-Day Ship from TexasStock orders ship same day from Mansfield, TX before 3pm CT.
Engineer Support844-439-4335 for cart push-force testing guidance and ergonomic specification.

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