Sliding Window Rollers

Hardware Store / Sliding Windows

Sliding Window Rollers & Carriages

A sliding window that sticks, drops or grinds almost always has worn rollers. The small carriage at each bottom corner carries the sash, and the nylon wheel flattens or seizes over the years. Fit the right replacement and the window glides again.

Slidemaster Hardware stocks replacement window rollers and carriages to suit the major Australian window brands, delivered Australia-wide.

Shop by brand

Window rollers to suit your brand

Carriage shape, wheel diameter and the pin fixing differ between brands. Match your window brand to the right part:

Most popular

Top-selling sliding window rollers

Our most-ordered replacement window carriages. Not sure which fits? Match your brand above, or send us a photo below.

Step 1

Find the right roller for your window

Window rollers are not universal. Before you buy, identify four things about your old carriage so the replacement fits and runs true.

1

Wheel diameter

Measure across the wheel face. The most important fit dimension.

2

Carriage size

Length and width of the plastic carriage body, and how it sits in the sash.

3

Pin or moulded

Many AU carriages run the wheel on a brass pin. Note if yours has one.

4

Wheel material

Nylon for standard windows, or stainless bearing for heavy or coastal sashes.

Not sure which one? Send us a photo

Take the old carriage out of the sash, snap a photo and note the wheel diameter. Our team matches it to the right part, even if you do not know the brand. Free identification, no obligation.

1 SnapPhotograph the old carriage next to a ruler
2 SendUpload it or message us the measurement
3 MatchWe confirm the exact replacement part
Sliding window roller carriage, GM-5120
Choose

Sliding window roller types explained

Match the roller to the sash weight and the track. Heavier and coastal windows need a stainless bearing.

Type Best for Why
Nylon flat roller Standard aluminium windows Quiet and economical for everyday sashes
Stainless (SS304) bearing Heavy or coastal windows Corrosion-resistant, smoother, longer life
Brass-pin carriage Most older AU windows The wheel turns on a brass pin axle — check yours has one
Concave vs flat wheel Match your track profile A concave wheel rides a raised rail; a flat wheel rides a flat track
Single vs twin Light vs heavy sashes Heavier sashes use two wheels to spread the load
Diagnose

How to tell your window rollers need replacing

  • The window is hard to slide or sticks part-way.
  • The sash drops, tilts or no longer sits square.
  • You hear grinding or scraping along the sill track.
  • The window jumps the track or won’t latch shut.
  • The wheel looks flat, cracked or seized when you check it.

Clean the track first. If the sash still drags, the carriage has worn out and needs replacing.

Fit it yourself

How to replace sliding window rollers

Most window carriages swap out in a few minutes per sash:

  1. Lift the sliding sash up and swing the bottom out of the frame to remove it.
  2. Find the roller carriage at each bottom corner of the sash.
  3. Unclip or unscrew the old carriage and pull it out.
  4. Fit the matching replacement carriage, then refit the sash into the track.

Not sure how yours comes apart? Send a photo and we’ll talk you through it.

Why Slidemaster

Buy your window rollers with confidence

Right-fit partsMatched to your brand and sash, not guesswork.
Broad brand coverageCarriages to suit the major AU window brands.
Australia-wide deliveryParts shipped nationwide from our store.
Photo-match helpUnsure? Send a photo and we identify it for you.
While you’re at it

Related sliding window parts

Delivery & returns

Getting your part to you

Australia-wide shipping
Same-day dispatch on in-stock items ordered before 1pm AWST.
Need help choosing?
Send us a photo of your old carriage before you order and we’ll match it.
Answers

Frequently asked questions

Are sliding window rollers universal?

No. Carriage size, wheel diameter and the pin fixing vary between brands and window types. Match the replacement to your window brand, or measure the old carriage before you order.

Can you replace sliding window rollers?

Yes. The roller carriage is a wear part. Lift the sash out of the frame, unclip or unscrew the old carriage at each bottom corner, and fit the matching replacement.

Why is my sliding window so hard to open?

Usually worn rollers, a dirty or gritty track, or a sash that has dropped onto the sill. Clean the track first; if it still drags, the carriage has worn out.

How much do sliding window rollers cost?

The carriages themselves are low cost. Price depends on the brand and wheel type, from economical nylon carriages to stainless-bearing units for heavy or coastal windows.

How do I identify my window roller?

Remove the old carriage and note the wheel diameter, the carriage length, whether it runs on a brass pin, and whether the wheel is flat or concave. Send us a photo with the measurement if you are unsure.

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