They are no longer in business.
They are cheap injection molded plastic. The clamps kept breaking and I was down to my last spare so I measured the components out and made a 3D model, which I printed in PETG. Now I have a couple spares. I'm running 3 original clamps and one 3D printed clamp on my telescope right now and it's held up fine. I have to be careful to orient them right so that I don't put too much stress on them and break them. Each 3D print costs about $2 so I don't mind just printing spares as I break them!
I just 3D printed in regular PETG, I'm sure Akshay or Randy can 3D print them in nicer carbon-fiber infused filaments which are much stronger.
These clamps are two articulating plastic pieces that clamp like collars around your poles with a bolt-nut assembly. The reason I like them is that you don't need to commit to the length of your truss poles. This is unfortunately important for me since my mirror cell has only two collimation knobs, so the only way I can adjust the range of focus is by adjusting tube lengths. You can choose to scale them down to size, but you'll also need to scale the T-bolt that goes through it and the clamping bolt/nut assembly (I use 1/4-20). The alternative is that I made the CAD design parametric, so if you know your way around FreeCAD, you can change the parameters and recompute the design.
Regards
Akarsh