I used black pipe. Copper is easier to cut and solder.
Just did copper. With as much moisture as we have in the South, Copper was the only thought. Black iron would rust way too fast. Had one leak when I was finished. Actually forgot to solder a joint at all, but otherwise it was great.
Dumb question I'm sure but is there any special copper or can I use the stuff that they sell at Home Depot or Lowes?
Thanks,
Gary
With the black iron pipe I also had a bunch of small leaks to go around and fix, took me a while to get them all. Rectorseal #5 was great, I had several joints that just wouldn't seal with teflon tape no matter what and using the Rectorseal did the trick.
Dumb question, but why not use galvinised (sp) steel pipe? No rust issues then.....

Use type "L" copper that the big box stores sell and you will be OK. It is a medium wall pipe and is fine to use for airlines. Type "M" is thinner and is "iffy" on compressed airlines. The pipe will have the type printed on it down the length of the pipe.
Black iron here. Add plenty of unions in case you need to add drops or service a line. Wrap the chinese fittings with about 6-8 turns of good teflon tape and a little bit of good pipe dope and you'll have minimal leaks IMHO.
black pipe rusts and harder to work with, Copper cools better clean and easy to work with but costs more.![]()
Thats what I used-heavy wall galvanized pipe. Has worked great for 15 years. No flaking or rust.
I agree Saabman. I think the techniques used in building the black pipe system are critical to having a low or no-leak system. I used two wraps of pipe tape and made sure to align pieces without backing off any to align. My system leaks at a rate of about 3 to 5 psi per hour which I don't consider to be bad at all for my needs. The small leaks probably come from the unions I installed so I can replace pipe, if necessary, in the future.
When I don't use the pipe system I close it off and take compressed air directly out of the compressor. Most of the time my system is shut down with no compressed air though.
And definitely buy the high-pressure flex pipe out of the compressor to avoid noise being transmitted to the rest of the house, in my case.
But my primary concern was cost, so it was black steel pipe for me. Maybe one day when I have a lot money to throw around I might use copper.![]()
Steve
