Flattening PVC water pipe

/ Flattening PVC water pipe #1  

bunyip

Elite Member
Joined
Sep 7, 2017
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Location
Flynn Victoria Australia
Tractor
Kioti DK 5810 HST
I want to make a chainsaw scabbard for the tractor and use PVC water pipe, I have seen it somewhere but I don't know how to flatten it, if I use her oven and it melts I fear castration with a blunt knife so I am calling on the erudite members here for some advice.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #2  
I want to make a chainsaw scabbard for the tractor and use PVC water pipe, I have seen it somewhere but I don't know how to flatten it, if I use her oven and it melts I fear castration with a blunt knife so I am calling on the erudite members here for some advice.

Sharpen all your knives for a start...
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #3  
I've seen people bend it with boiling water. Never seen someone flatten it. I imagine you could get a large pot boiling and stick it in there and see if it softens it up. I'd think you'd need some sort of form to press it into to get it to go from round to oval.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #5  
Not sure if there is a real difference but PVC electrical conduit is often manipulated with heat...try using a quality heat gun (not a hair dryer)...
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe
  • Thread Starter
#6  
I have thought about wrapping it in foil and sticking it in the BBQ then pressing it between two redgum sleepers (they are HEAVY), a heat gun I think would be too localised and only soften one spot, of course njow I want to see this again I can't find where it was, hot water I didn't think would soften it enough but will try with some offcuts at the weekend if this rain stops.
If all else fails I will use acrylic sheet and glue it up.
/pine, thanks, I was typing when you posted.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #7  
Blow the heat up the bore of the pipe, when it all warms up, press it with anything stout and flat. Use the floor if you want.

I do it all the time. I use a Heat Master hot air gun, Commercial conduit benders use hot wire radiant heat.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe
  • Thread Starter
#8  
I have a heat gun, will try that with a cap, I can cut it off when finished.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #10  
This guy shows you how to bend it. But it's in the oven, so wear your protective steel cup.

Seriously, though, he only heats it at 250 for 15 minutes and it gets soft, but doesn't come near dripping.

 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #11  
I've bent PVC into custom shapes, mostly for conduit to bend around obstacles. I use a heat gun and keep it moving all the time! I have also used a propane torch, but that is more of a challenge to keep from scorching the plastic. Check periodically to see if it is soft because it will go from stiff to soft quickly. I have also converted PVC pipe to PVC sheet. You have to have a clamp and apply lots of pressure while it is cooling, it has a tendency to stay in the pipe form. Once it's cool, it will keep it's shape.

Note: If you just go back and forth, the center will get twice as much heat as the ends so you need to pause at the ends to be sure you heat it evenly.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #12  
I've not ever reshaped fittings, but you will find the pipe easy to do. There are enough fumes where you wouldn't want to do it in the kitchen. A grill works well for a larger piece.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #13  
I have done it in the oven to make a patch to go over a sewer line I nicked one time. Low temperature and keep an eye on it. Protect the ends as they will take on more heat.

I am guessing that larger "cored" thick-wall PVC will not behave well, as the middle material is slightly different formulation. But if it's solid PVC with no difference in the middle it should be easy to work with. Thin wall PVC drain pipe would probably be a cinch to work with.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #14  
I have seen electricians heat pvc by sticking it over the exhaust of their truck when the forgot to bring the electric conduit heater to the job. The exhaust flows through the center and heats the pipe equally.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #15  
Once owned a small aircraft, a Luscomb, that had a scrapped windshield.
I pieced it back together braced on a wood form and very finely polished the Bondo patches.
I had previously made an arrangement with a local pizza guy to use his oven to heat and shape my plexiglass sheet.

Well my DIY windshield fabrication was a total success and the gov't inspector passed it OK.

With heat most plastics can be shaped and moulded.
Do small tests with scraps if U are not sure.

Just last fall I heat shaped a liner for my blower chute and that was a real success as I never clogged even with the worst wet snows.
I used a plumber's torch so it its not pretty, but it works.

Reminds me, a friend just bought a 48 inch heat bar to mould/shape covid screens for his business. That should offer all sorts of plastic moulding possibilities.
Since I'm the guy that located the heat bar on the web I guess I have dibs.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #16  
I bought a plastic cutting board, ran it through a table saw into the pieces I needed, bolted it all together and mounted it on my 3 pt log splitter about 4 years ago. Its still there after sitting in the sunlight and weather and still works great.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe
  • Thread Starter
#17  
Thanks all, a lot of ideas to run with, pretty is not important just functional.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #19  
I've always wanted an old electric stove in my garage for just such projects.
 
/ Flattening PVC water pipe #20  
 
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