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HARDWARE & CONNECTORS · CSA Z259.12 · CANADIAN-STOCKED

Fall Protection Hardware & Connectors in Canada

The connecting hardware that joins a fall arrest system: self-locking carabiners, snap hooks, scaffold and ladder hooks, D-ring plates and anchorage connectors. CSA Z259.12 connecting components from Safety Direct, FallTech and Malta Dynamics — stocked in Paris, Ontario and priced in CAD, with each product's certification stated plainly.

Quick answerConnectors join the parts of a fall arrest system — carabiners, snap hooks, scaffold & ladder hooks, and anchorage connectors. Use only self-locking, compatible, CSA Z259.12-rated connectors, and never connect hook-to-hook or snap onto an incompatible D-ring.
  • Carabiners
  • Snap hooks
  • Scaffold & ladder hooks
  • Anchorage connectors
  • CSA Z259.12

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Choosing connectors

SELF-LOCKING ONLY

Modern fall protection requires self-locking (double- or triple-action) connectors that can't open accidentally. They prevent roll-out, where a hook works its way off the connection point under load.

COMPATIBILITY MATTERS

Match the gate size to the D-ring or anchor, and never connect two snap hooks together or clip a hook onto a part it isn't sized for. Incompatible connections can disengage under load.

STEEL, STAINLESS OR ALUMINUM

Steel and stainless take abuse and resist corrosion; aluminum saves weight for crews carrying gear all day. Each connector lists its gate strength and CSA Z259.12 / ANSI Z359.12 rating.

Connecting hardware for Canadian fall protection

Connectors are the small parts that hold a fall arrest system together — and the part most often used wrong. Fall Protection Canada stocks CSA Z259.12 connectors: self-locking steel, stainless and aluminum carabiners, snap hooks (standard, swivel, clevis and tie-back), scaffold and ladder hooks with large gates, D-ring plates and bolt-on anchorage connectors, from Safety Direct, FallTech and Malta Dynamics — all shipped from Paris, Ontario in CAD.

Connectors join the rest of the system: they clip to a harness D-ring, terminate a lanyard or SRL, and tie off to a roof anchor. Browse the full PPE range, compare brands, or grab a complete kit. Not sure a hook fits your anchor? Call 437-475-2066 and we'll confirm compatibility.

Connector types at a glance
ConnectorUsed forStandard
CarabinersGeneral connections — self-locking steel & aluminumCSA Z259.12 / ANSI Z359.12
Snap hooksLanyard / SRL ends — standard, swivel, clevis, tie-backCSA Z259.12
Scaffold & ladder hooksLarge-gate hooks for scaffold tube & rungsCSA Z259.12
Anchorage connectorsD-ring plates, bolt-on & swivel anchor pointsCSA Z259.15 / ANSI Z359.18

Hardware & connectors — common questions

ANSWERS YOU CAN CITE

01

What is a connector in fall protection?

A connector is the piece of hardware that joins two components of a fall arrest system — a carabiner, snap hook, scaffold or ladder hook, D-ring or anchorage connector. It links the harness to the lanyard or SRL, and the lanyard or SRL to the anchor. In Canada, connecting components are covered by CSA Z259.12.
02

Why must connectors be self-locking?

A self-locking (double- or triple-action) gate requires two or three deliberate movements to open, so it can't be opened by accident or pushed open under load. This prevents roll-out, where a non-locking hook works its way off the connection point. Self-locking connectors are the current requirement under CSA Z259.12 and ANSI Z359.12.
03

Can I connect two snap hooks together?

No. Connecting two snap hooks to each other, or clipping a snap hook to a D-ring or part it isn't sized for, can cause the gate to be loaded sideways and disengage. Always connect compatible components — match the hook gate to the ring or anchor it's rated for, and use a connector designed for that interface.
04

What standard covers fall protection connectors?

In Canada, connecting components (carabiners, snap hooks, etc.) fall under CSA Z259.12; anchorage connectors fall under CSA Z259.15. Many imported items are rated to ANSI Z359.12 or Z359.18 instead. A CSA mark is a CSA certification — an ANSI marking alone is not. Each product page states its actual rating so you can match it to your provincial OHS rules.