Hades12
Well-known member
I have had this shop almost 6 years and it had PVC in it when I got it. The other day we changed out a hose and two days later come in to find this broken. You can see stress cracks on the inside of it.

WOW, Glad no one got hurt.
looks like that brass MNPT fitting was really wrenched deep into that PVC fitting
WOW, Glad no one got hurt.
looks like that brass MNPT fitting was really wrenched deep into that PVC fitting
you know no matter how many time you tell somebody that pvc is dangerous, they not going listen till somebody get hurt. god way of weeding out the stupid
Had one of my guys do the change out and I assume that is what happend to it. He pulled it down to far and did not hold it good.
Changed out that leg with some Pex and it is back up and working good.
That failed because of a common plumbing mistake. You NEVER screw a metal male thread into a plastic fitting. This failure really had nothing to say about PVC.

Yes, always use a male PVC into metal female.
Exactly right, most likely would have blown out if it was water also.Yes, always ues a male PVC into metal female.
WOW, Glad no one got hurt.
looks like that brass MNPT fitting was really wrenched deep into that PVC fitting
Until it bottomed out! lol
PVC for Air is like playing Russian Roulette. When it goes, if you are near, you are going to wish you had not been.
Do not use PVC for Air and replace any PVC you have with Black Pipe. That really is a no brainer.

I wish the photo was better focused. IMHO, this could be the poster boy, for non pvc usage for air lines. I know, and have read the other post about this stuff lasting a long time, BUT !![]()
I have the same question will Pex work safely??
There are many better choices around than pvc, but my employer still has the whole shop supplied with pvc, and the drops are not secured. One day someone is going to be pulling and the air hose and will bust the drop right off.
Pex????
I have the same question will Pex work safely??
Yup....holds the pressure, doesn't fracture if it fails,easily installed and is actually pretty rugged.OH and did I mention...not expensive!

I just read this link http://www.lni.wa.gov/Safety/Basics/HazAlerts/902.asp It says you can use ABS for compressed air?? Isn't that the black stuff? or is this a different kind of ABS? I thought you used ABS for drains. Keith
