B&M Pintool · Spring Pin / Roll Pin Insertion Tool
Spring Pin Insertion Tool
The part number matches your pin's nominal size. A 1/8″ pin uses PT-125 — even though it measures ~.135″ relaxed, because a spring pin is made oversized so it grips. See the reference chart.
| Nominal pin / hole | Decimal Ø | Part no. |
|---|
Why this beats a cheap punch
A punch drives the pin. This places it.
The magnet holds the spring pin square to the bore before you apply any force — no third hand, no pins dropped into the assembly.
The guide sleeve surrounds the pin as it presses, so it can't walk side-to-side or mushroom over — clean every time.
Hand, hammer, or arbor press — consistent seating depth on part 1 and part 500. Built to last on a production line.
How it works
Four steps to a clean, square pin
The magnet does the holding and the guide does the aiming — so the pin goes in straight whether you tap it, press it, or seat it by hand.
Load the pin
Drop the spring pin onto the magnetic tip. It stays put — no pinching, no dropping into the assembly.
Reach the bore
Slim body gets into tight, hard-to-reach locations — bring the tool to the job, not the job to the bench.
Press it home
By hand, hammer, or press. The guide stops the pin walking side-to-side or peening over.
Tool retracts
The spring pulls the guide back automatically — pin seated flush, tool ready for the next one.
Free tool · The chart that picks the pin
Find your pin in the Spring Pin Reference Chart
Most people land here from our free reference chart. Look up your hole or pin diameter, read across to the recommended B&M Pintool, and order the matching part number. No guessing on relaxed vs. nominal size.
| Nominal pin | Decimal Ø | Pintool |
|---|---|---|
| 1/16″ | .0625″ | PT-062 |
| 3/32″ | .0938″ | PT-094 |
| 1/8″ | .1250″ | PT-125 |
| 3/16″ | .1875″ | PT-187 |
| 1/4″ | .2500″ | PT-250 |
Questions
Sizing & fit
Which Pintool do I buy?
Match the part number to your pin's nominal size — a 1/8" pin in a 1/8" hole takes the 1/8" tool, part number PT-125. Spring pins are made oversized so they grip, so a 1/8" (.125") pin measures larger when relaxed — around .135" — then contracts as you press it in and expands to lock once seated. That's expected. Still unsure? Open the Spring Pin Reference Chart and read across from your hole size.
Spring pin, roll pin, slotted pin — are they the same thing?
Yes — all three name the same hollow, slotted spring-steel pin. "Spring pin" and "slotted pin" are the engineering terms; "roll pin" is the common shop name. The Pintool installs all of them.
Does the Pintool remove pins?
No — it's an insertion tool. It seats spring pins; it doesn't extract them.
Can I use a stainless steel pin?
Yes. The tool works with stainless, carbon-steel, and most standard spring-pin materials. The magnetic tip holds ferrous pins; for non-magnetic stainless the guide sleeve still keeps the pin square — you just seat it without the magnetic hold.
Will the Pintool fit in a tight space?
The body is slim to reach into tight assemblies, but clearance varies by size. Check the tool's outer diameter for your part number against your access opening. If you're working in a confined fixture, contact us with your dimensions and we'll confirm fit before you buy.
Do you take high-volume or custom orders?
Yes. B&M is a precision CNC shop first — the Pintool is one product we make. For production runs we run blanket-release pricing, and we can make custom sizes or a modified guide. For 10 or more units or a special, request a quote.
Volume pricing
| Qty | Discount | Price/tool |
|---|---|---|
| 1–9 | List price | $134.99 |
| 10+ | 15% off | — |
| Larger or custom order | Request a quote → | |
Discount applies automatically at checkout. Minimum 10 tools — mix any sizes.
Discounted figure is indicative — exact total shown at checkout.