Interchange Rules (What Actually Matters)
Cross referencing is more than matching digits—interchange depends on specs and application.
- Dimensional match (critical fits, bolt patterns, lengths)
- Performance ratings (load, speed, pressure, temperature)
- Material compatibility (chemicals, washdown, abrasion)
- System requirements (alignment, lubrication, clearances)
Common Cross Reference Categories
Expand these into sub-pages to scale the hub:
- Bearings interchange (ISO/ANSI series equivalents)
- Seals interchange (materials + lip styles)
- Filters interchange (micron rating + media + end caps)
- Motors interchange (frame size + shaft + enclosure)
- Packaging machine components interchange
How To Build Great Cross Reference Pages (SEO + Conversion)
For each interchange page, include:
- Original number + brand
- Equivalent numbers (table format)
- Short compatibility notes (what to verify)
- Links to the Technical Data section for spec confirmation
- A “Request Quote” CTA for hard-to-find parts
FAQs
Can cross reference pages rank well?
Yes—interchange and equivalency queries are high-intent. The key is clear tables, helpful notes, and strong internal links.
Should I include hundreds of equivalents on one page?
Better: create category pages (e.g., Bearings Interchange) and then individual interchange pages per series/brand pair.