I found 2 1/2" THIN steel pipes, the 1st is 1m, and the 2nd
is 90cm, I can't screw it, I want to use the 90cm one as a chamber, and the
1m one as a barrel, I think it will be powerful.
but i need any idea how to connect it to the valve, so.., any ideas?
1/2" thin steel pipes
- Gippeto
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Weld/braze the pipe to a pipe fitting.
"It could be that the purpose of your life is to serve as a warning to others" – unknown
Liberalism is a mental disorder, reality is it's cure.
Liberalism is a mental disorder, reality is it's cure.
- jimmy101
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Depends a lot on what kind of valve it is. A ball valve might be able to handle steel welding/brazing temperatures, then again it might not. Any valve with a rubber or teflon seal or diaphram won't take the heat needed to weld/braze steel. (Some metal valves designed to be welded can be disassembled and the temperture sensitive parts removed for welding.)elad311 wrote:Is it ok to braze it right into the valve?Gippeto wrote:Weld/braze the pipe to a pipe fitting.
Ball valves for copper water supply systems often have a teflon seal. They'll handle copper soldering temperatures, but that temp is a lot lower than welding/brazing temperatures used for steel.
So, weld a threaded fitting to the pipe then use a threaded valve.
You probably should do some research on the pipe to figure out its pressure rating. You don't say what kind of gun it is; for a generic combustion almost any metal pipe should be OK. If you're talking about a 10X hybrid then you really need to know the characteristics of the pipe you're using.

I just want to build a regular pneumatic..jimmy101 wrote: Depends a lot on what kind of valve it is. A ball valve might be able to handle steel welding/brazing temperatures, then again it might not. Any valve with a rubber or teflon seal or diaphram won't take the heat needed to weld/braze steel. (Some metal valves designed to be welded can be disassembled and the temperture sensitive parts removed for welding.)
Ball valves for copper water supply systems often have a teflon seal. They'll handle copper soldering temperatures, but that temp is a lot lower than welding/brazing temperatures used for steel.
So, weld a threaded fitting to the pipe then use a threaded valve.
You probably should do some research on the pipe to figure out its pressure rating. You don't say what kind of gun it is; for a generic combustion almost any metal pipe should be OK. If you're talking about a 10X hybrid then you really need to know the characteristics of the pipe you're using.
But the pipe, is thin, some people can bend it..
- sniper hero
- Specialist 3

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if you weld a big nut on it you will be able to get it off/on easy.
proud member of dutch spud clan
coming: semi auto pellet sniper:D
coming: semi auto pellet sniper:D
You could also consider using compression fittings or epoxy.
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