Learn to use a metric steel pipe schedule. The meaning and use of data is explained. Aluminum, copper and plastic pipes have their own schedules; same idea, different numbers.
Brilliant question. The nominal dimensions of tubing are based on the outside diameter, the OD are whole numbers in the inch-based schedule. The nominal dimensions of pipes are based on the inside diameter, the ID`s are whole numbers in the inch-based schedule.
This video is very informative. Thank You for making and uploading. I have one Q = What difference between tube and pipe ? So my request to u if possible make video.
excellent video,i have been looking for it...knowledge sharing is a must...i work in a thermal power plant in fly ash system.We mostly use schedule 40 and 80 pipes,pipes coated inside with cast basalt and ceramic tiles in case of long radius bends,however we face regular problems of ceramic tiles being carried away with fly ash,maybe due to pipeline vibrations...do you have any idea about expansion bellows and at what pipeline length intervals the expansion bellows are to be placed?? anyways thanx for the video,i enjoyed it.
Ashish Tiwari Expansion features (bellows, breaks, joints) are also in concrete sidewalks, bridge decks, long walls. The tiles pop off as their coeff. of thermal expansion is different from steel`s or whatever the pipes are made of. Dissimilar materials don`t stay together under changing temperature. Expansion features are placed at a distance where the 2 dissimilar materials` expansion is equal. For example, the tile heats up by 150 degrees and expands 1mm for 5 m and the steel heats up by 35 degrees (tiles insulate it) and expands 1mm for 5m. (Imaginary numbers to make a point) Look up the 2 coeff. numbers, measure the 2 temperatures, do the math, see what lenghts they are equal at. Makes sense? I can post a quick sample calculation, coming up next week.
Brilliant question. The nominal dimensions of tubing are based on the outside diameter, the OD are whole numbers in the inch-based schedule. The nominal dimensions of pipes are based on the inside diameter, the ID`s are whole numbers in the inch-based schedule.
Wow very helpful video. Well explain and easy to understand.
Thanks for watching
Nice explanation! LİKE!
Nicely explained
Thank you so much 🙂
thank very much for your time
nice presentation sir..
Thanks a lot for your help
GOOD JOB. FUNNY AND SMART
This video is very informative. Thank You for making and uploading.
I have one Q = What difference between tube and pipe ? So my request to u if possible make video.
Difference in how they are measured and threaded or not
Thanks nice explanation
Nice presentation, Please give PDF file of above paper which is shown in video, send drive link,
Thank you.
Can anybody tell me for 1/4" thread size pipe how much size of expander should use while installation?
Thank you for explan
excellent video,i have been looking for it...knowledge sharing is a must...i work in a thermal power plant in fly ash system.We mostly use schedule 40 and 80 pipes,pipes coated inside with cast basalt and ceramic tiles in case of long radius bends,however we face regular problems of ceramic tiles being carried away with fly ash,maybe due to pipeline vibrations...do you have any idea about expansion bellows and at what pipeline length intervals the expansion bellows are to be placed??
anyways thanx for the video,i enjoyed it.
Ashish Tiwari Expansion features (bellows, breaks, joints) are also in concrete sidewalks, bridge decks, long walls. The tiles pop off as their coeff. of thermal expansion is different from steel`s or whatever the pipes are made of. Dissimilar materials don`t stay together under changing temperature. Expansion features are placed at a distance where the 2 dissimilar materials` expansion is equal. For example, the tile heats up by 150 degrees and expands 1mm for 5 m and the steel heats up by 35 degrees (tiles insulate it) and expands 1mm for 5m. (Imaginary numbers to make a point)
Look up the 2 coeff. numbers, measure the 2 temperatures, do the math, see what lenghts they are equal at.
Makes sense? I can post a quick sample calculation, coming up next week.
apprenticemath Thank you!! that was really helpful..i would appreciate if you post a video on that...
shooting it this hour, I`m all set for it
Ashish Tiwari Here it is. Lots of background and concept, your math is from 19:30 - on. ruclips.net/video/prKBT0KFga0/видео.html
Ashish Tiwari Of course it is about heat related stuff, not one word about vibrations, resonant frequency, interlocking tile design etc.
Pipe ka od 219 mm Mila inch ME kanwat karne ka keya Sutra hai
thank you
can you please give me a copy of that chart.. pls..
thanks buddy for clearing very simple thing make confused in the industry by the so called experts,ha ha ha its simple wall thickness
isnt suffix s such as 10s or 5s stands for stainless steel?
+Ahmad Zaki Abdul Karim No. Check out my video on stainless steel numbering: ruclips.net/video/liu9OjnoZbc/видео.html
thx..
where i can i get that chat???
Don`t know about chatting.
the metric pipe schedule chart. forward it to me please.
Oh, my bad. Here is one, blue lines are metric baeresources.com/wp-content/uploads/2011/04/Standards-Pipe-Schedules-Chart.pdf
Asalmualikum : Apprentice math: Sir How I Know 1/4 copper pipe in Aircondition.. what is guage... China American.. plz explain me as you like....
Measure it with a vernier caliper: ruclips.net/video/S_zsEPIN1EI/видео.html