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How do you bend pipe/tubing?

Jackfre

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Dec 26, 2010
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4,411
Location
N CA
I'm not talking copper tubing. I've spent a lot of time with those benders. I'm looking at trying my hand at some "architectural" type work. Gates and such. Sweeps, curves, radius'.

I'm installing some floor mounted pull points in my new slab. Pouring this Thursday.
 
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MBfreak

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Dec 10, 2010
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Linkoping , Sweden
Here is something I made at home with "hobby" tools.
The one part I farmed out was the semicircular part to clear the door handle.
The square tubing is 30 mm ( 1 1/4") and wall thickness is 2,5 mm ( 0,1 ")

The semicircular part was formed in a very old machine, heavy duty. Was previously used to form stainless tubes for water cooling of the stator windings in large (> 100 MW) 14 kV generators.

So, a combination of home cooked and farmed out seems reasonable to me. It is REALLY hard to make smooth bends on tubular material ( ferrous) at home.

Ola
 

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Piper27

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May 27, 2012
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98
Location
South Florida
Here is something I made at home with "hobby" tools.
The one part I farmed out was the semicircular part to clear the door handle.
The square tubing is 30 mm ( 1 1/4") and wall thickness is 2,5 mm ( 0,1 ")

The semicircular part was formed in a very old machine, heavy duty. Was previously used to form stainless tubes for water cooling of the stator windings in large (> 100 MW) 14 kV generators.

So, a combination of home cooked and farmed out seems reasonable to me. It is REALLY hard to make smooth bends on tubular material ( ferrous) at home.

Ola
Nice work MBfreak:thumbup:
 

William Payne

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Joined
Mar 15, 2010
Messages
7,804
Location
Wanganui, New Zealand
Do some research on tubing benders. There are many different types. Whats best depends on what you want to do with it.

There are some benders that are good for pipe, some that are good for tubing and some that will do a bit of everything.
 

kazlx

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Oct 30, 2012
Messages
2,851
Location
Tustin, CA
Tubing bender for harder bends and a tubing roller for sweeping curves. The HF roller isn't bad for the money. Then something like a JD2 Model 3 is a good bender. With the bender though it's the dies that get expensive...
 

brawls43

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Aug 29, 2012
Messages
133
Location
Minneapolis
I built my tubing bender from the Got trikes bender plans. And I upgraded my HF roller with the kit from Swag Offroad.
 
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Jack Olsen

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Mar 22, 2009
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Los Angeles
From cheapest to 'not so cheap:'

This is a link to a page on bending metal by hand:

http://www.metalgeek.com/archives/2005/05/01/000047.php

Then, as others have said, a roll-type bender for gradual curves and a Hossfeld-type for tighter radius stuff. I have the Harbor Freight roller type with some dies from Swag Offroad and I used their plans to power the HF roller type with a pipe threader.

bendingb.jpg


Here's a video clip of the thing making arches for a pergola I put over my deck.


You can get pretty tight radius bends with a roll bender:

bent.jpg


And once you start bending, it's hard to stop. All of this was done with the same roll bender.

53r8.jpg


candles04.jpg


gater01.jpg


final01.jpg


I also own a Hossfeld #1. But I haven't yet had a need for the thing.
 

stokefire7

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Joined
Oct 5, 2011
Messages
616
...so I got this bender from Northern Tools. Shipped U. P. S. , shows up with no ends. Great. Pulled everything out and assembled. I ended up missing 1 cotter pin and a washer. I can live with that.
Bent some 1 1/4" black in my apartment , works good , I like it.
 

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fnieto

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Aug 27, 2013
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Tucson,Arizona
Ercolina pipe bender and a Curvatrici profile roller.
 

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Man Cave

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Oct 29, 2009
Messages
94
Location
southern Indiana
JD2 model II. It was not even called JD2 when I bought it in 1987. Bob Hughes was still in south florida at the time. He changed to JD2 when he made it to central florida. Been a great bender for me and my one man shop. I have dies from 1/2" all the way to 1 3/4" with everything in between in at least two radius' per die.
 

sailah

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Joined
Sep 17, 2013
Messages
165
Location
Hingham, MA
I have a JD model 3 converted to full hydraulic with a decent assortment of dies. They are pricey.

Also have a harbor freight tubing roller, haven't used it much though.
 

metal1313

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Joined
Apr 28, 2009
Messages
3,416
Location
clinton NJ
i have a hossfeld number 2 with mostly dies for flat stock, and a jd2 mod. 3 i got on CL for 100. i havent had a project where ive needed the jd2 yet so i have not needed to purchase dies for it.

i am always looking for hossfeld dies though
 

TruckinT

New member
Joined
Nov 11, 2012
Messages
2
I built mine with the Got Trikes plans as well. Started it years ago on his original set of plans but when I went to finish it last year, I noticed he had new plans for an air over hydro version. Ordered those up and found that the differences were more than I thought, so I essentially had to modify everything I already built to make it work. On top of that, I used 3/4" arms so I ended up with a Frankenstein version that probably would have been easier to just start fresh, oh well. I also added some leveling screws that aren't pictured which helps a lot to get accurate bends IMO. Now I just need another job to afford all the tube I keep feeding it! :rocker:



 

TheEquineFencer

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Joined
Jan 15, 2009
Messages
9,278
Location
Farmville, NC 27828
IF your looking to do architectural work I think a hossfeld would be your best investment.

http://www.hossfeldbender.com/benders/model-2-bender-standard.php

I second this idea. I had one that was manual I converted to Hydraulic. It'll do a LOT of things. You can get dies for doing round tubing, pipe, square or rectangle tubing, bending angle iron edge in/out or on the angle. You can punch and shear smaller steel with it too. It'll bend flat bar anyway you want it, on a curve if you like. It's just a matter of buying the dies for it. The neatest thing it does quick and easy is bend small flat or round stock 90* in about 2 seconds by hand.

When I get things straightened out again, that's what I'm buying and building again.
 
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