NPT threads as defined by ANSI B1.20.1 are not designed to seal solely based on their thread form. If you want a guaranteed leak-free seal, you HAVE to use some kind of sealant - be it teflon, dope, or otherwise. The specs and tolerances are too relaxed with NPT. You can get fittings you can tighten with a 6 foot pipe wrench, all the way until there's no thread left and it will still leak. You can see this more easily on smaller NPT fittings. I've screwed countless NPT air fittings into tools without any tape. I get out my big pliers and bottom that sucker out in the tool, and it will still leak. I pull the fitting out, put a few wraps of tape, and then it will seal tight just a few turns into the tool. These threads
MAY or MAY NOT seal without sealant.
NPTF or "Dryseal" threads, are NPT threads that ARE designed to seal mechanically as defined by ANSI B1.20.3. These threads have more carefully designed roots/crest height, and those specifications are much more tightly controlled.
These threads WILL seal without any sealant.
If NPT were designed to seal mechanically with the threads alone, NPTF wouldn't need to exist.
I personally just use tape for junk at home, but when I worked in industry we used to use Loctite 567 exclusively without tape. Always seemed to work really well.
I don't give a rip what a webpage from a company thats trying to sell me a product says. I have worked in the NPT fitting business longer than that webpage has been around. Teflon tape is NOT a sealant. If you disagree, please show me one application of TEFLON outside of pipe tape, where its sold for anything other than lubricity applications.
Teflon is widely used in the aerospace and petrochemical industries as sealing rings. It's durable, withstands a wide temperature range and its chemically resistant to basically everything.