Rigging Accessories

Accessories that tie your whole event together

We carry all the rigging accessories you’ll need from the leading industry brands: Crosby, Chicago Hardware, and Columbus McKinnon (CM).  These accessories are rarely thought about when designing events, yet are essential to any rigging or staging build. Shackles, motor cables, power, steel – when you’re booking the gear you need, you probably aren’t thinking about all these little bits. 

But we are.

Our Accounts and Project Managers make sure that you get all the accessories that go with your rigging, even if you don’t verbalize them. We know if you want 50 motors, you also need everything that goes with them. We know that you’ll need GAC for safetying overhead projectors or extra spansets to strain-relief your cable drops. And when it comes to art installs, scenic hangs, or expo signage – aircraft cables and smaller accessories are key to keeping the rigging safe while making it as invisible as possible. 

What are rigging accessories?

Rigging accessories include everything you need to make motors work, to hang loads safely, and to make sure the structures you build are secure. 

Examples of some of the more common accessories we carry:

      • TWINTEX® Endless Roundslings by SpanSet
      • Gac Flex™ by Liftall Steelflex Stage Slings
      • Steel Eye and Eye Wire Rope Slings
      • Galvanized Aircraft Cable
      • Truss hangers
      • Nicopress Swaging Tool Kit
      • Screw-pin anchor shackles
      • CM Special Theatrical Alloy (S.T.A.C.) Chain
      • Pear rings / Masterlinks
      • Turnbuckles
      • Structural I-Beam Clamps
      • I-Beam Trolleys
      • Schedule 40 Pipe
      • And more!

We also carry other things like a vast array of pipe and drapes, truss hinges, stage ballasts, crowd control barricades, and our line of UNI-Products which help you get more creative with your stage designs. 

Truss towers outside on a roof with cantilever truss hanging over edge of roof, to hang lights from the end of each cantilever, Lights point down towards ground. You can see safety lines pulling back out of the frame to hold the trusses in position.