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High Temperature Casters

Every wheel material has a temperature ceiling. Polyurethane softens at 180°F. Standard polypropylene deforms at 250°F. Nylon flows at 350°F. Cross those thresholds and the wheel stops being a wheel — it becomes a flat spot, a fused puck, or a melted casualty stuck to the rack.

Application 1 — bakery rack and proof box casters

200–500°F · Continuous use

The Bakery Rack Workhorse

Operating range: ~250°F continuous in oven, room temp in proof box, 200°F in bake hold

Standard bakery rack casters use glass-filled nylon wheels with high-temperature lithium grease and zinc-plated rigging. The rack moves between proof box (~85°F), oven (~400°F), and ambient kitchen multiple times per shift. The wheel sees the temperature cycle, not sustained peak. Phenolic is the upgrade for higher-temp commercial bakery and pizza oven racks running 425-475°F continuous.

Application 2 — autoclave and sterilizer casters

250–275°F · Steam pressure cycle

Steam Autoclave Cart Casters

Operating range: ~270°F under 15-20 psi steam, with full-cycle wet exposure

Autoclave carts face dual challenges: temperature and saturated steam. The wheel and rigging both have to handle the heat and the moisture without rust or material change. Stainless steel rigging with phenolic or epoxy resin wheels is the standard build. Glass-filled nylon will work for short-cycle exposure but slowly absorbs steam and loses dimensional stability over time. Most hospital and pharma autoclaves spec phenolic for sustained service.

Application 3 — powder coat oven racks

350–450°F · Sustained dry heat

Powder Coat Curing Rack Casters

Operating range: 350–450°F continuous during 20-30 minute cure cycles, ambient between batches

Powder coating cure ovens run hot and dry. Phenolic wheels are the standard at this temperature. Glass-filled nylon at the 400-450°F end of the range will work but trends toward the edge of its rating — phenolic gives margin. Cast iron is the heavier-duty alternative for racks that carry significant load (engine castings, large fabrications) where the polymer wheels would exceed their load rating.

Application 4 — heat treatment and kiln casters

500–1000°F+ · Industrial heat treatment

The 800-Degree-Plus Tier

Operating range: cast iron 800°F+, steel wheel 1300°F+ continuous

Above ~500°F, all polymer and resin wheels stop working. Cast iron is the entry point. For steel hardening lines, ceramic kilns, and high-temp brazing furnaces, steel wheels with high-temp graphite-packed bearings or oil-lubricated sleeve bearings are required. Sealed ball or roller bearings cannot survive sustained 800°F+ operation regardless of the seal compound.

Application 5 — food service oven and warmer casters

200–350°F · Restaurant duty

Convection Oven, Warmer, Cook-Cool Cart

Operating range: 200-350°F intermittent, room temp during transport

Commercial kitchen equipment that sees periodic heat exposure during cleaning, transport into hot environments, or holding warmer duty. Standard polyurethane survives 180°F but degrades faster than glass-filled nylon at sustained 250°F+. The right call here is glass-filled nylon with stainless steel rigging for NSF kitchen compatibility.

The wheel-material temperature matrix

Polyurethane
~180°F max
Softens and flat-spots above limit. Never spec for any heat application.
Standard nylon
~250°F max
OK for warmer carts and intermittent heat. Not for oven racks.
Glass-filled nylon
~400°F continuous, 450°F brief
The bakery rack standard. Works for moderate-temp continuous service.
Phenolic
~475°F continuous, 575°F peak
The autoclave and powder-coat oven standard. Stiff, heat-stable, water-stable.
Epoxy resin
~475°F continuous
Premium phenolic alternative with better moisture stability for steam applications.
Cast iron
~800°F continuous
Heat treatment, kiln, brazing furnace. Marks floors when cool.
Steel
~1300°F continuous
The highest tier. Steel-hardening lines, ceramic kilns, industrial furnace cars.
Bearing grease matters as much as the wheel — A glass-filled nylon wheel rated 400°F will fail at 250°F if it’s packed with standard lithium grease (which liquefies and runs out at 300°F). Match the bearing grease temperature rating to the wheel rating. High-temp grease (Krytox or Mobilith SHC 460) is the spec for any caster above 350°F operation.

Wet vs. dry heat changes the recommendation

Saturated steam (autoclave, dishwasher rack, sterilizer) demands stainless rigging and a wheel that won’t absorb water at temperature — phenolic or epoxy resin. Glass-filled nylon technically rates 400°F but absorbs steam over time and loses dimensional accuracy. Dry heat (oven rack, powder coat, kiln) is more forgiving on wheel material; glass-filled nylon and phenolic both work in 300-450°F dry-heat range. Always declare dry vs. wet when specifying.

Heat caster FAQs

How do I figure out my actual operating temperature?Two measurements: peak temperature the wheel sees, and duration at peak. A wheel rated 400°F continuous handles 400°F for hours; the same wheel rated 450°F “brief” only handles those temps for minutes. Match peak duration to wheel rating.
Will phenolic mark my floor?Phenolic wheels can leave dark scuffs on light-colored floors, especially when hot. Cast iron marks worse. Pick non-marking glass-filled nylon for any heat application where floor protection matters and temperature allows.
What grease should the bearings use?For 200-300°F applications, high-temp lithium-complex grease (e.g., Mobilith SHC 220). For 300-500°F, fluorinated grease (Krytox or DuPont Performance Lubricants). Above 500°F, dry graphite-packed bearings or sleeve bearings with oil mist.
Can I use phenolic indoors and out?Phenolic is dimensionally stable and works indoors and outdoors. Slightly more brittle than glass-filled nylon under impact — not the right pick for routes that cross broken pavement or dock seams at speed.
What about cleaning chemicals?Caustic dish-machine chemistries (high pH) degrade glass-filled nylon over time. Phenolic and epoxy resin both handle high-pH chemistry better. Confirm cleaning chemistry alongside operating temperature when specifying.
Spec by actual operating temperature
Tell us peak temp, duration at peak, wet vs dry, and cleaning chemistry. We’ll match the right wheel material and bearing grease.
Call 844-439-4335

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