Briney Tooling Systems — Complete Product Guide
Summary
Briney Tooling Systems is a privately held toolholder manufacturer based in Bad Axe, Michigan. They make collet chucks, shrink-fit holders, shell mill holders, and custom tooling interfaces for production CNC shops. They are not a cutting tool company — they don't make inserts, drills, or end mills. Their business is the interface between your spindle and your cutting tool.
Bad Axe is a small town on the Michigan Thumb. Briney is the kind of company that mid-size Midwest shops have been quietly running for decades without much noise about it. You won't see them at every trade show booth, but you'll see their holders on the spindles at Big-3 automotive suppliers and aerospace shops in the Great Lakes region. Quality is legitimate. Scale is smaller than Haimer or REGO-FIX, which means lead times on custom work are more predictable and the phone gets answered.
If you're a US shop that needs CAT40 or CAT50 tooling, wants US-made documentation for an aerospace supplier audit, and doesn't need the full Haimer ecosystem, Briney is worth a serious look.
What Briney is best for
- Production automotive shops — CAT40 and CAT50 collet chuck and shell mill holder programs for high-volume machining lines. Their Big-3 presence is real.
- Aerospace supplier qualification — US-made, traceable, documentable. Procurement teams at tier-one aerospace suppliers know the name.
- ER, TG, and DA collet systems — full programs in all three collet standards, not just ER. Shops that inherited TG100 or DA collet blocks appreciate that Briney still catalogs them properly.
- Shell mill and face mill adapters — straightforward, accurate, available in a wide range of arbor sizes and spindle tapers.
- Custom holders — shorter runs, faster turnaround than the global giants. If you need a non-standard gage length or a special coolant port location, they can do it without sending you through four layers of distributor approval.
Briney is not the first call for high-speed balanced holders above 20,000 RPM or for HSK-A63 precision boring applications where Haimer or Schunk own the market. Know the use case.
Brand architecture
Briney organizes their catalog around spindle taper interface and then holder style. They don't use sub-brand names the way Kennametal or Sandvik do — it's a clean product-line catalog.
Spindle interfaces supported
- CAT40 and CAT50 (V-flange, ANSI standard) — the core of their business
- BT40 and BT50 (JIS standard, dual-contact) — available
- HSK-A63 and HSK-A100 — available, though this is not their deepest catalog tier
Collet chuck lines
ER collet chucks — the most-specified product. ER16, ER20, ER25, ER32, ER40 in CAT40 and CAT50. ER is the global standard for reason — wide clamping range per collet, good availability, easy to source replacement collets anywhere. Briney's ER chucks are a safe, mid-price choice for general milling and drilling.
TG collet chucks — TG75, TG100, TG150. TG (Tapping Guide) collets have a larger shank contact area than ER and are popular in older production environments, especially in automotive. If you have a legacy TG program on a transfer line or older machining center, Briney catalogs them correctly where some suppliers have dropped the line.
DA collet chucks — DA100, DA180, DA300. DA collets are a split-sleeve style that grip over a longer engagement length. Used in some drilling and tapping applications. Less common in new setups but Briney still supports the format.
Shrink-fit holders
Straight-bore shrink-fit holders for solid-carbide end mills. Require an induction heater (Briney does not manufacture heaters — Haimer and Zoller are the standard). Shrink-fit gives you the best runout and balance of any holder style at reasonable cost. Briney's shrink-fit holders are a practical choice when you already have a heater and want a US-made holder at a lower price than the Haimer Safe-Lock equivalents.
Shell mill and face mill holders
Standard V-flange shell mill arbors in 1", 1-1/4", 1-1/2", and 2" arbor diameters. These are commodity-adjacent but Briney's tolerances are tighter than import tooling. If your face mill is chipping edges and your runout is the question, switching from import arbors to Briney-spec arbors is a cheap experiment.
Milling chucks
Side-lock and Weldon-flat end mill holders, and hydraulic milling chucks. The hydraulic chuck line competes with Schunk Tribos and Kennametal KM in concept — fluid expansion clamping, good damping, good runout — but Briney's version is positioned as a production-tier option rather than a premium one.
Custom toolholders
This is where Briney differentiates from the catalog giants. Non-standard gage lengths, special coolant-through configurations, modified flange dimensions — they do this as a regular business, not as a special-order exception.
Holder specification cheat sheet
| Holder type | Best application | Runout (typical) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| ER collet chuck | General milling, drilling | 0.0002–0.0005" TIR | Verify at 1" gage |
| TG collet chuck | Legacy production lines, heavy drilling | 0.0003–0.0006" TIR | TG100 most common |
| DA collet chuck | Tapping, light drilling | 0.0003–0.0006" TIR | Legacy format |
| Shrink-fit | Solid carbide end mills, finish milling | < 0.0002" TIR | Requires induction heater |
| Shell mill arbor | Face milling, shoulder milling | 0.0002–0.0005" TIR | Check arbor perpendicularity |
| Hydraulic chuck | Finish milling, vibration-sensitive ops | 0.0001–0.0003" TIR | Higher cost than ER |
TIR values are starting reference points — always measure your actual assembly before trusting a spec sheet.
When to use Briney vs. alternatives
- vs. Haimer: Haimer is the precision leader, especially for shrink-fit and high-speed balancing. Their Safe-Lock pull-out retention is a real differentiator in aerospace. Briney is less expensive and domestically made — if you don't need Safe-Lock and your application is under 15,000 RPM, Briney is competitive.
- vs. REGO-FIX: REGO-FIX invented the ER collet and makes the reference-standard ER chuck. If ER precision is the primary concern, REGO-FIX powRgrip or their precision ER line is a step up from Briney. For general production work, Briney holds its own.
- vs. Lyndex-Nikken: Lyndex-Nikken has a broader catalog and deeper hydraulic chuck program. Briney beats them on custom work and US-made documentation.
- vs. Command Tooling (Parlec): Both are US-based mid-tier toolholder brands. Parlec has a stronger presence in the Northeast; Briney is stronger in the Midwest and with Michigan automotive. Similar quality tier.
- vs. import tooling (Maritool, Techniks): Briney costs more. The tolerances are tighter, the steel is traceable, and the documentation supports aerospace procurement. For a prototype shop doing short runs on a Haas, import tooling may be fine. For a production line running 18 hours a day, pay for Briney.
Related articles
- ER collet systems — sizes, tolerances, and selection
- Shrink-fit toolholding — setup and best practices
- Toolholder runout — how to measure and what it costs you
- CAT40 vs. CAT50 vs. HSK — spindle taper selection guide
- Shell mill holders — arbor sizing and face mill mounting
Ask 4man
4man tracks which holder interfaces your shop runs and can recommend a Briney holder spec for a given spindle taper, collet type, and tool diameter. If you're sourcing a custom holder, describe the geometry and it'll help you build the spec before you call Briney's applications team.