TheSneeze wrote on 07/27/22 at 10:56:17:In that video the guy was coping TUBING, not PIPE.
This particular project is actually pipe, 2" (I.D.) schedule 40 with ~2-3/8" outside diameter.
It just happens that in the handrail industry we mostly work with pipe, not tube. I buy a lot of parts from Wagner and Julius Blum, most common parts such as elbows, sleeves, end caps, base plates, etc are made for pipe, although there is plenty of stuff for tubes as well.
TheSneeze wrote on 07/27/22 at 10:53:04:Not to nit pick, but after a career in metal fabrication management/quality assurance, I have to speak up to help educate. There is a difference between PIPE and TUBING.
Too many people refer to tube as "pipe". If you buy a pipe bender, the die sizes will be much different than a tube bender. This is due to pipe not being sized for it's outside diameter, and tube is. When looking into equipment to work these types of material, know the difference. A pipe bender will kink tubing. A tube bender will not as the dies are properly sized to closely fit the outside diameter.
{rant over / class dismissed!}
Thank you for this. Actually a pipe/tube bender is on my radar, waiting for a project to come in that will justify the purchase. Can you elaborate a little further, I've never worked with one, but I thought the machine is the machine, its the dies/rollers that matter? I'd love to get a machine that is able to do both round pipe and tube, as well as square/rectangular profiles.