Threading question
If it is to be done in this manner, you will have to flare the female end so that it will mate with a male end. As c11man said, just get a female adapter. It would probably be cheaper than paying someone to thread the interior of the pipe anyway.
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Use a close nipple and a female to female coupler. The close nipple is the shortest available. It is threaded to where the threads are right up against each other back to back.
i came across this on a site when i was looking for some brass fittings
http://www.plumbingsupply.com/brass.html
scroll all the way to the bottom of the page
http://www.plumbingsupply.com/brass.html
scroll all the way to the bottom of the page
I have a little new question here;
Can i thread a metal rod(that is the exact size of the real plumbing pipe) to like 3/4" but all the way on 3 inches ?
Without that cone shaped thread that makes fitings stuck together?
With a threading machine.
Please tell me if you know.
Can i thread a metal rod(that is the exact size of the real plumbing pipe) to like 3/4" but all the way on 3 inches ?
Without that cone shaped thread that makes fitings stuck together?
With a threading machine.
Please tell me if you know.
It would be making a threaded tit of 3/4 inch, but with a steal rod(i mean a plumbing pipe but not hollow), so i would be getting a tit, like a plumbing pipe one would, but not hollow, it would be full of steel.
Little paint here;
(i need that to then, after drill holes of right size in it)
Can it be made(with a threading machine) ?
Little paint here;
(i need that to then, after drill holes of right size in it)
Can it be made(with a threading machine) ?
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- POLAND_SPUD
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if you're asking if it's possible to thread a rod then the answer is yes
'cone shaped' threads are called tappered threads
'cone shaped' threads are called tappered threads
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- POLAND_SPUD
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NPT is tapered (also notice the spelling I made a typo in my last post)
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_pipe_thread
so it's best if you use BSPP
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_st ... ipe_thread
but you might as well use NPT... you might experience some problems with sealing it if you thread it all the way but it should mate
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/National_pipe_thread
so it's best if you use BSPP
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/British_st ... ipe_thread
but you might as well use NPT... you might experience some problems with sealing it if you thread it all the way but it should mate
Children are the future
unless we stop them now
unless we stop them now
Here is a good explanation and charts to show the thread differences for:
NPT, NPS, BSPT BSPP
http://pipeandhose.com/?q=node/19
NPT, NPS, BSPT BSPP
http://pipeandhose.com/?q=node/19