The use of inserts on 10mm rolls of plastic covered copper. Brass inserts are available for this purpose, but does anyone use them. They have an O/D of 7.7mm where as the I/D of all of the coils available to me are 8.6 min.
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Even the brass inserts designed for 10mm copper are too loose inside the pipe. It's not always that easy to get flared fittings apart from the fact they are more expensive. I have actually asked fueldump.co.uk who produce these brass inserts to do a bespoke run of 8.4mm O/D inserts and they have agreed to a 1000 min order.Merchants here don’t have them, despite oil installs still very common here.
Even the brass inserts designed for 10mm copper are too loose inside the pipe. It's not always that easy to get flared fittings apart from the fact they are more expensive. I have actually asked fueldump.co.uk who produce these brass inserts to do a bespoke run of 8.4mm O/D inserts and they have agreed to a 1000 min order.
I've been quoted 95 cent an insert and that was for the 7.7mm O/D. bringing the diameter of your pipe down to 6.4mm. Why do they make them so loose. They distort the pipe and olive. Most of the merchants i know think they're for qual.8.4mm inserts avaliable from heating world of spares £23 per hundred.
Don't think I will be changing to compression fittings any time soon.
7.7mm fit snuggly into a cut end that has been formed by a manual pipe-cutter. 8.4mm OD fits nicely into 8.6mm ID pipe that has been saw cut and/or de-burred carefully.I've been quoted 95 cent an insert and that was for the 7.7mm O/D. bringing the diameter of your pipe down to 6.4mm. Why do they make them so loose. They distort the pipe and olive. Most of the merchants i know think they're for qual.
It did occur to me that might be the explanation, and if so they were designed by somebody who didn't know what de-burr means. I doubt the 7.7 insert ever comes into play when used, which means these joints would be considered substandard. It's no wonder merchants here don't stock them as plumbers know they're useless and wouldn't buy them. The body's that oversee standards in oil and gas should be on top of this.7.7mm fit snuggly into a cut end that has been formed by a manual pipe-cutter. 8.4mm OD fits nicely into 8.6mm ID pipe that has been saw cut and/or de-burred carefully.
Guess which there is more demand for.
Reply to the thread, titled "Who uses inserts" which is posted in Oil and Solid Fuel Forum on Plumbers Forums.
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