I found 2 1/2" THIN steel pipes, the 1st is 1m, and the 2nd
is 90cm, I can't screw it, I want to use the 90cm one as a chamber, and the
1m one as a barrel, I think it will be powerful.
but i need any idea how to connect it to the valve, so.., any ideas?
1/2" thin steel pipes
- Gippeto
- First Sergeant 3
- Posts: 2504
- Joined: Sat Jan 19, 2008 10:14 am
- Location: Soon to be socialist shit hole.
- Has thanked: 2 times
- Been thanked: 17 times
Weld/braze the pipe to a pipe fitting.
"It could be that the purpose of your life is to serve as a warning to others" – unknown
Liberalism is a mental disorder, reality is it's cure.
Liberalism is a mental disorder, reality is it's cure.
- jimmy101
- Sergeant Major 2
- Posts: 3206
- Joined: Wed Mar 28, 2007 9:48 am
- Location: Greenwood, Indiana
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 18 times
- Contact:
Depends a lot on what kind of valve it is. A ball valve might be able to handle steel welding/brazing temperatures, then again it might not. Any valve with a rubber or teflon seal or diaphram won't take the heat needed to weld/braze steel. (Some metal valves designed to be welded can be disassembled and the temperture sensitive parts removed for welding.)elad311 wrote:Is it ok to braze it right into the valve?Gippeto wrote:Weld/braze the pipe to a pipe fitting.
Ball valves for copper water supply systems often have a teflon seal. They'll handle copper soldering temperatures, but that temp is a lot lower than welding/brazing temperatures used for steel.
So, weld a threaded fitting to the pipe then use a threaded valve.
You probably should do some research on the pipe to figure out its pressure rating. You don't say what kind of gun it is; for a generic combustion almost any metal pipe should be OK. If you're talking about a 10X hybrid then you really need to know the characteristics of the pipe you're using.

I just want to build a regular pneumatic..jimmy101 wrote: Depends a lot on what kind of valve it is. A ball valve might be able to handle steel welding/brazing temperatures, then again it might not. Any valve with a rubber or teflon seal or diaphram won't take the heat needed to weld/braze steel. (Some metal valves designed to be welded can be disassembled and the temperture sensitive parts removed for welding.)
Ball valves for copper water supply systems often have a teflon seal. They'll handle copper soldering temperatures, but that temp is a lot lower than welding/brazing temperatures used for steel.
So, weld a threaded fitting to the pipe then use a threaded valve.
You probably should do some research on the pipe to figure out its pressure rating. You don't say what kind of gun it is; for a generic combustion almost any metal pipe should be OK. If you're talking about a 10X hybrid then you really need to know the characteristics of the pipe you're using.
But the pipe, is thin, some people can bend it..
Being thin and all is there a chance it is galvanized steel, more specifically conduit? In that case be aware of the dangers. I've never brazed galvanized steel, but I know welding on it is worthless.
- sniper hero
- Specialist 3
- Posts: 332
- Joined: Fri Mar 07, 2008 3:12 pm
if you weld a big nut on it you will be able to get it off/on easy.
proud member of dutch spud clan
coming: semi auto pellet sniper:D
coming: semi auto pellet sniper:D
You could also consider using compression fittings or epoxy.