Good guess. I am thinking these fittings are for oxygen in a hospital setting. The material looks like stainless.fittings for for pneumatic control is my guess
Nailed it. Thanks!89230-04 | Union Tee| Push-In | Aignep Alpha SwiftFit Fitting | 1/4" tube
Union Tee | Push-In | 1/4" tube | Aignep USA | John Henry Foster has served the Greater St. Louis area since 1944. | Pneumatic | Fittings | Brass | 89230-04store.jhf.com
Are you sure?Air fittings, not for liquid fuel.
Did you read the thread?Not sure, but would verify before use!
89230-04 | Union Tee| Push-In | Aignep Alpha SwiftFit Fitting | 1/4" tube
Union Tee | Push-In | 1/4" tube | Aignep USA | John Henry Foster has served the Greater St. Louis area since 1944. | Pneumatic | Fittings | Brass | 89230-04store.jhf.com
Looks more like bronze or brass to me. Push-in fittings for nylon air tubing, maybe on trucks.Good guess. I am thinking these fittings are for oxygen in a hospital setting. The material looks like stainless.
Well, don't get into any fuel-injected vehicles ever again; they're full of push-lock fittings.I've used a gazillion of these for pneumatic lines on industrial manufacturing equipment. They work well, but not well enough for oxygen or liquid fuel, as one person suggested. This is the same type of fitting that is being used in plumbing (Shark Bite). Having seen a lot of these fittings leak over the years, I would never bury a plumbing connector like this behind a finished wall!
Truck fittings have to be marked D.O.T. not that I've ever seen a failure report for a fitting not marked as such........... Have seen them for the bozos that stick a piece of pipe in a main airline and use 2 hose clamps to hold it together along with the big red sticker on the windshield.Looks more like bronze or brass to me. Push-in fittings for nylon air tubing, maybe on trucks.
The manufacturing site that I worked at would do a compressed air audit every year. This would involve using a sound meter to detect any air leaks in the plant automation pneumatic systems. We will alway find a few of these types of fittings that were leaking from the connection. This is why I wouldn't trust this type of fitting on something that could catch fire or flood my house. I don't think I've heard of this regularly happening with automotive fuel injection push connectors, so there must be a difference in the two applications.Well, don't get into any fuel-injected vehicles ever again; they're full of push-lock fittings
