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Fitting fire hose to barbs

  • 1.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-03-2008 19:12
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    To the List:
    
     
    
    I got my Nitrile rubber 1 ?? fire hose late this afternoon, and at the end
    of the day I cut my lengths and started playing with fitting the hose over
    the barbs of my end pieces.  The inner diameter is slightly smaller than the
    end of the barb.  Even with grease and wanging the barb around the inside of
    the end of the hose to stretch it a bit, it looks like it?s going to be a
    lot of work to get those suckers on ? a lot of screaming, cursing, and
    gnashing of teeth.  I was hoping to secure a tool designed for this task at
    a hardware store, but there appears to be no such animal.  The suggestion of
    placing the hose end in very hot water was made to me, and I will try that
    tomorrow.  Does anyone who has experience doing this have any suggestions
    that I could use to make my life easier here?  
    
     
    
    Will Truitt
    
     
    
     
    


  • 2.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-03-2008 19:43
    From "Joe And Penny Goss" <imatunr@srvinet.com>
    
    hi Will,
    Never done this but would reccomend the hose end be in boiling water for enough time to soften the end. NOT JUST HOT WATER. I have worked with other items that are similar to this.
    Joe Goss RPT
    Mother Goose Tools
    imatunr@srvinet.com
    www.mothergoosetools.com
      


  • 3.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-03-2008 19:56
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Will do.  Thanks,  Joe.
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Joe And Penny Goss
    Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 8:43 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: Re: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    hi Will,
    
    Never done this but would reccomend the hose end be in boiling water for
    enough time to soften the end. NOT JUST HOT WATER. I have worked with other
    items that are similar to this.
    
    Joe Goss RPT
    Mother Goose Tools
    imatunr@srvinet.com
    www.mothergoosetools.com
    
    


  • 4.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-03-2008 20:15
    From Ron Overs <sec@overspianos.com.au>
    
    Will,
    Greetings from down under. Heating the end will 
    help as mentioned, but another major help is to 
    use rubber grease, which is a grease made from 
    vegetable oils. If you can't get this product, 
    cooking oil will also work just fine.
    
    Ron O.
    
    >Will do.  Thanks,  Joe.
    >
    >Will
    >
    >From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org 
    >[mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf Of 
    >Joe And Penny Goss
    >Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 8:43 PM
    >To: Pianotech List
    >Subject: Re: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    >
    >hi Will,
    >Never done this but would reccomend the hose end 
    >be in boiling water for enough time to soften 
    >the end. NOT JUST HOT WATER. I have worked with 
    >other items that are similar to this.
    >Joe Goss RPT
    >Mother Goose Tools
    ><mailto:imatunr@srvinet.com>imatunr@srvinet.com
    ><http://www.mothergoosetools.com>www.mothergoosetools.com
    >
    >


  • 5.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 03:36
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Hi Ron:
    
     
    
    Greetings from up above.  I do have a synthetic grease, which lubes it up
    just fine.  Now for the boilng hot water.  I?ve made 6 cauls, so that?s 12
    pieces of misery without something to make it easier.  
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Ron Overs
    Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 9:15 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: RE: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Will,
    
    Greetings from down under. Heating the end will help as mentioned, but
    another major help is to use rubber grease, which is a grease made from
    vegetable oils. If you can't get this product, cooking oil will also work
    just fine.
    
     
    
    Ron O.
    
     
    
    Will do.  Thanks,  Joe.
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Joe And Penny Goss
    Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 8:43 PM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: Re: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    hi Will,
    
    Never done this but would reccomend the hose end be in boiling water for
    enough time to soften the end. NOT JUST HOT WATER. I have worked with other
    items that are similar to this.
    
    Joe Goss RPT
    Mother Goose Tools
    imatunr@srvinet.com
    www.mothergoosetools.com
    
    


  • 6.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-03-2008 20:06
    From Marcel Carey <mcpianos@hotmail.com>
    
    Hi Will,You've woke my memory up. Yes I remember having this problem. I uses dishwashing liquid to lubricate the inside of the hose and prayed (or used liturgical language) but was able to fit them in withou tthe boiling water thing.Marcel Carey  The suggestion of placing the hose end in very hot water was made to
    me, and I will try that tomorrow.  Does anyone who has experience doing this have
    any suggestions that I could use to make my life easier here?  
    
     
    
    Will Truitt
    
     
    
     
    
    
    
    
    
    
    
    _________________________________________________________________
    


  • 7.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 04:19
    From "Farrell" <mfarrel2@tampabay.rr.com>
    
    Hope the boiling water/oil thing works for you. I found that when I put the hardware on my hoses that my four-letter-word vocabulary increases dramatically. I think I did finally use some sort of lubricant - been so long now I really don't remember what - but I do remember lots of cursing, twisting, pounding, pleading, etc. But in the end they finally go and you get something like this.....
    
    
    
    
    
    I took these pictures yesterday morning - I ribbed a Del Fandrich design soundboard panel for a 1970s S&S D.
    
    I find ribbing panels one of the most satisfying activities. I love how the panel goes from wet-noodle to rock stiffness. Fun stuff!
    
    FWIW: I used three presses to rib this panel. A smaller press was used for the high treble ribs. I takes me about 20 minutes to prep, glue and clean-up each rib - so even if I am working without interruption, leapfrogging with three presses gives me 40 to 50 minutes of clamping time for each rib. I'm using Titebond Original which has a recommended clamp time of 20 minutes or so. Because of press space limitations with the fanned rib array, I often only use two presses when ribbing small panels. This particular soundboard has 19 ribs - so using three presses was much more efficient.
    
    Terry Farrell
    
    www.farrellpiano.com
      


  • 8.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 05:22
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Hi Terry:
    
     
    
    Thanks for your input.  I?ve been practicing the seven words you can?t say
    on TV in anticipation of my need to use them repeatedly today.  Since misery
    loves company, it gladdens my heart to know that others have suffered as
    much as I am going to.  Gives me the strength to go on ? suffering ennobles
    us or something like that.   With the 5 rib radii I will be using and the
    set up of my  caul radii, and 11 ribs; I am planning on 3 rounds of 4, 4,
    and 3 ribs respectively.  
    
     
    
    Nice pictures, SWEET looking panel.
    
     
    
    Will 
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Farrell
    Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 5:19 AM
    To: Pianotech List
    Subject: Re: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Hope the boiling water/oil thing works for you. I found that when I put the
    hardware on my hoses that my four-letter-word vocabulary increases
    dramatically. I think I did finally use some sort of lubricant - been so
    long now I really don't remember what - but I do remember lots of cursing,
    twisting, pounding, pleading, etc. But in the end they finally go and you
    get something like this.....
    
     
    
    
    
     
    
    
    
     
    
    I took these pictures yesterday morning - I ribbed a Del Fandrich design
    soundboard panel for a 1970s S&S D.
    
     
    
    I find ribbing panels one of the most satisfying activities. I love how the
    panel goes from wet-noodle to rock stiffness. Fun stuff!
    
     
    
    FWIW: I used three presses to rib this panel. A smaller press was used for
    the high treble ribs. I takes me about 20 minutes to prep, glue and clean-up
    each rib - so even if I am working without interruption, leapfrogging with
    three presses gives me 40 to 50 minutes of clamping time for each rib. I'm
    using Titebond Original which has a recommended clamp time of 20 minutes or
    so. Because of press space limitations with the fanned rib array, I often
    only use two presses when ribbing small panels. This particular soundboard
    has 19 ribs - so using three presses was much more efficient.
    
     
    
    Terry Farrell
    
     
    
    www.farrellpiano.com
    
    


  • 9.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 10-04-2008 10:11
    From "Nick Gravagne" <gravagnegang@att.net>
    
    Hi Will,
    
     
    
    What size are your end caps? Are you able to at least get the barbed
    diameter started on the hose, or is it more like trying to stretch a bicycle
    tire on the rim? If the latter, I doubt your success in making it work (at
    least not easily).
    
     
    
    I also use 1.5? fire hose (comes with some sort of rubberized inner sleeve),
    but trying to mate this hose with 1.5? end caps did not work at all. I found
    this out many years ago. The industry protocols of fire hose and related
    fittings do not necessarily match those of the plumbing industry. The end
    caps that worked for me are 1.25? stuff. I recently purchased more through
    Amazon (Genova #31814 1-1/4" White MPT Plug) at 0.92 cents each. 
    
     
    
    My procedure is to butter up the barbs with gray plumbers putty (also acts
    as lube), then twist and hammer on the caps (dead blow) to the hoses. The
    use of large channel lock pliers also helped a great deal in ?turning? them
    on. When they are pushed home and flush, the clamps are seriously tightened
    up. I recently did several of these without boiling water or special
    lubrication but with a bit of muscle. Fortunately I found that the use of
    colorful language and poetic flourishes was not required.
    
     
    
    Ciao for now?
    
     
    
    Nick Gravagne, RPT
    
    Piano Technicians Guild
    
    Member Society Manufacturing Engineers
    
    Voice Mail 928-476-4143
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Will Truitt
    Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 6:12 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    To the List:
    
     
    
    I got my Nitrile rubber 1 ?? fire hose late this afternoon, and at the end
    of the day I cut my lengths and started playing with fitting the hose over
    the barbs of my end pieces.  The inner diameter is slightly smaller than the
    end of the barb.  Even with grease and wanging the barb around the inside of
    the end of the hose to stretch it a bit, it looks like it?s going to be a
    lot of work to get those suckers on ? a lot of screaming, cursing, and
    gnashing of teeth.  I was hoping to secure a tool designed for this task at
    a hardware store, but there appears to be no such animal.  The suggestion of
    placing the hose end in very hot water was made to me, and I will try that
    tomorrow.  Does anyone who has experience doing this have any suggestions
    that I could use to make my life easier here?  
    
     
    
    Will Truitt
    
     
    
     
    


  • 10.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 16:07
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Hi Nick:
    
     
    
    Your comments are very timely, and I am grateful for having them.  My end
    caps are supposed to be 1 ?? (See second paragraph below)
    
     
    
    I spent part of the day today developing blisters and frustrating myself.  I
    dunked the  1 ??  Nitrile hose in boiling water multiple times and kept
    working to expand it.  I had bought some 1 ?? plain PVC pipe, which I
    buttered and finally was able to insert into the end of the hose.  I then
    was pulling up on it and working it around the sides, the idea to be to
    stretch out the hose at the ends enough to get it started on the barb.  As I
    kept working it and reheating it in the boiling water, that did cause some
    very grudging  (and small) expansion of the hose end.  I then switched to
    heating the end with a heat gun and working the PVC pipe around it to
    expand.  Some more gain after a long time.  I actually tapered the end of
    one of the barbs to make it easier to get on.  Then I used a 1 ?? drum
    sander fixture (like you would insert into a drill press).  That tool you
    put the drum onto and tighten a nut to secure it in place, which it does by
    expanding the sides out into the sandpaper to hold it.  I used that to press
    out the sides, which I also did while using the heat gun.  After 2 ? hours
    of doing this on a single end, the most I was able to get was the end of the
    barb into the hose about 1/8?, where the taper would prevent it from going
    any further.  Oh, and I had been buttering the inside of the hose and the
    barb with grease all the while.  
    
     
    
    At a certain point, you realize that you are beating your head against the
    wall, and maybe it?s time to stop.  At first, you wonder if you?re an idiot;
    but after you have tried so many things (including those that others have
    said they had success with) you can at least say to yourself, ?Well, I may
    still be an idiot, but I think there is something else going on here too. ?
    I took my calipers and miked the ends of the barbs, which varied from 1.618
    to 1.645 inches in diameter.  The unbarbed shank remaining after the barbs
    ended measured out at 1.54 inches.  It was too difficult to get a reliable
    inner diameter reading on the hose because it is flexible and of the fold
    flat variety.  Whatever it is, it?s obviously smaller than the barb end!    
    
     
    
    Thanks for your remark about your using the 1.25? stuff for the end caps.
    I?ll head over to Lowe?s tomorrow morning and buy one or two barbs of that
    size and see if that is going to be a workable solution in a test fitting.
    If that seems to be the ticket, then I can go about securing some ones of
    sufficient quality.  
    
     
    
    I thought I was being pretty careful about this.  Jude Reveley has been
    extremely helpful to me with a lot of this.  I went to a fantastic local
    hardware store in Mass. Near Jude?s shop, and bought the exact same fittings
    that he is using with success and with nitrile hose.  I got my nitrile hose
    from a local supplier who ordered it from me.  I don?t know what the
    differences between my hose and Jude?s are, but there must be some, as he
    did not experience the level of difficulty that I have.  
    
     
    
    Nick, how are you holding the hose to twist and hammer ? by hand?  I was
    finding that the hose wanted to fold over against the pressure of the barb
    against it instead of staying straight on.  I have some large channel lock
    pliers, so I will try that too.
    
     
    
    I happened to stop by my best friend?s house this afternoon.  A plumber was
    working on his furnace.  The plumber suggested going to an Auto parts store
    and getting a tool that is used to expand exhaust pipe so that one end of
    the pipe can fit over the end of another.  You keep turning it to expand it.
    I?ll look for such on Monday 
    
     
    
    Thanks again for your help, and any further comments you have would be
    appreciated.  
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Nick Gravagne
    Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 11:11 AM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Hi Will,
    
     
    
    What size are your end caps? Are you able to at least get the barbed
    diameter started on the hose, or is it more like trying to stretch a bicycle
    tire on the rim? If the latter, I doubt your success in making it work (at
    least not easily).
    
     
    
    I also use 1.5? fire hose (comes with some sort of rubberized inner sleeve),
    but trying to mate this hose with 1.5? end caps did not work at all. I found
    this out many years ago. The industry protocols of fire hose and related
    fittings do not necessarily match those of the plumbing industry. The end
    caps that worked for me are 1.25? stuff. I recently purchased more through
    Amazon (Genova #31814 1-1/4" White MPT Plug) at 0.92 cents each. 
    
     
    
    My procedure is to butter up the barbs with gray plumbers putty (also acts
    as lube), then twist and hammer on the caps (dead blow) to the hoses. The
    use of large channel lock pliers also helped a great deal in ?turning? them
    on. When they are pushed home and flush, the clamps are seriously tightened
    up. I recently did several of these without boiling water or special
    lubrication but with a bit of muscle. Fortunately I found that the use of
    colorful language and poetic flourishes was not required.
    
     
    
    Ciao for now?
    
     
    
    Nick Gravagne, RPT
    
    Piano Technicians Guild
    
    Member Society Manufacturing Engineers
    
    Voice Mail 928-476-4143
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Will Truitt
    Sent: Friday, October 03, 2008 6:12 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    To the List:
    
     
    
    I got my Nitrile rubber 1 ?? fire hose late this afternoon, and at the end
    of the day I cut my lengths and started playing with fitting the hose over
    the barbs of my end pieces.  The inner diameter is slightly smaller than the
    end of the barb.  Even with grease and wanging the barb around the inside of
    the end of the hose to stretch it a bit, it looks like it?s going to be a
    lot of work to get those suckers on ? a lot of screaming, cursing, and
    gnashing of teeth.  I was hoping to secure a tool designed for this task at
    a hardware store, but there appears to be no such animal.  The suggestion of
    placing the hose end in very hot water was made to me, and I will try that
    tomorrow.  Does anyone who has experience doing this have any suggestions
    that I could use to make my life easier here?  
    
     
    
    Will Truitt
    
     
    
     
    


  • 11.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 10-04-2008 15:10
    From Gerald Cousins <cousins_gerry@msn.com>
    
    Will,
    Fitting to barb's  what???
    Ya better ask her first, don't  'cha think?
    
    Attached is the original message
    Maybe the original got clipped too.  Wonder, as well, if that hurt?
    
    Hope it works out ok.  Have a good week-end
    Gerry
    
    


  • 12.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 10-04-2008 15:19
    From Gerald Cousins <cousins_gerry@msn.com>
    
    Terry, GREAT photo's!
    
    Will, 
    Hope the Hot water worked. And mission has been accomplished with only 3 of the7 unmentionable words being used.  
    It might be worth considering double clamping the hoses until everything settles.
    All the lubes and such may cause some slippage to the joint.  Had that happen to me once. Lots o fun skipping around
    trying to get to the shut off valve. Not I set it up with either quick release connectors or valves. Just another thought.
    Gerry
    


  • 13.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 16:20
    From Jon Page <jonpage@comcast.net>
    
    Isn't there an end fitting you can obtain from the hose supplier?
    They might have some means of capping the ends or fittings
    which are not fire department specific.
    -- 
    
    Regards,
    
    Jon Page
    


  • 14.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-04-2008 17:22
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Hi Jon:
    
    I was going to call him Monday with my travails, so I'll check into that.
    Thanks,
    
    Will
    
    


  • 15.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Registered Piano Technician
    Posted 10-05-2008 09:01
    From "Nick Gravagne" <gravagnegang@att.net>
    
    Hi Will,
    
     
    
    
    Glad to help. Do your end caps look like these?  Go to
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000BQ7VPA (Genova #31814 1-1/4" White MPT
    Plug)
    
    
     
    
    
    The threaded portion (barbs?) fits well enough into the hose I.D. with a
    little push, hammering, and turning with pliers. Fill up the threads with
    plumbers putty (the old fashioned gray stuff) and get the cap started in the
    hose. Through a combination of twisting, pushing and hammering with a small
    dead blow the cap will insert all the way.
    
    
     
    
    
    After you have the cap inserted about half way, the hammering technique
    involves (assuming you?re right handed) gripping the hose firmly in your
    left hand at the partially inserted cap thread area and tapping. Strange as
    this sounds it will work. Use hose/band clamps to tightly secure.
    
    
     
    
     
    
    Nick Gravagne, RPT
    
    Piano Technicians Guild
    
    Member Society Manufacturing Engineers
    
    Voice Mail 928-476-4143
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Will Truitt
    Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 3:07 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Hi Nick:
    
     
    
    Your comments are very timely, and I am grateful for having them.  My end
    caps are supposed to be 1 ?? (See second paragraph below)
    
     
    
     
    
    Thanks for your remark about your using the 1.25? stuff for the end caps.
    I?ll head over to Lowe?s tomorrow morning and buy one or two barbs of that
    size and see if that is going to be a workable solution in a test fitting.
    If that seems to be the ticket, then I can go about securing some ones of
    sufficient quality.  
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Nick, how are you holding the hose to twist and hammer ? by hand?  I was
    finding that the hose wanted to fold over against the pressure of the barb
    against it instead of staying straight on.  I have some large channel lock
    pliers, so I will try that too.
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Thanks again for your help, and any further comments you have would be
    appreciated.  
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
     
    
     
    


  • 16.  Fitting fire hose to barbs

    Posted 10-05-2008 13:13
      |   view attached
    From "Will Truitt" <surfdog@metrocast.net>
    
    Hi Nick:
    
     
    
    No, they do not look like your Genovas.  I don?t have a source for a
    picture, so I cannot direct you.  But they have the barbed ends that you
    commonly see on PVC items (and, as I said earlier, they are exactly what
    Jude Reveley is using with good success with Nitrile hose.   I did stop by
    Lowes and bought a piece with a 1  ?? barb to just try with the hose.  It
    was too loose in the 1 ?? hose for me to want to try it, plus I spent over a
    hundred dollars on these end fittings and spent a lot of time putting them
    together so that they do not leak (they don?t, but the crapola Home Depot
    hose I started with sure did!)  So I am invested in making these items work,
    plus the Nitrile hose was $168.00 for 50 feet of it.  
    
     
    
    An update on my efforts today:  I stopped by an auto parts store and bought
    a pipe expander (used to expand an end of an auto exhaust pipe to fit over
    another pipe.  It will expand from 1 ? to 2 7/8?.  
    
    I was able to insert it part way into the end of tubing that I worked so
    hard on yesterday.  When you turn it, it expands the cylinder, which in turn
    expands the pipe.  It does work, but I found that it is just slightly too
    big for my task.  The net result was that, because I was not able to insert
    it far enough into the hose, it expanded the hose at the end with a bit too
    much taper, so the barb would get started, but go only so far.  It?s just
    barely the wrong size, but it worked well enough to tell me that the proper
    sized one should work.  Grainger sells what looks like what I need:
    
     
    
    http://images.grainger.com/B269_28/images/products/1MUE3.JPG
    
     
    
    This is made by Westward, with a range of 1 1/8 to 1 ??.  It sells for
    $21.43 as item no. 1MUE3.  The smaller size should allow me to fully insert
    the expandable portion fully into the hose.  As I tighten it, it will do so
    for as much of the length of the hose as I will need to fit the barb, and
    with very little taper.  I already know from the size that I have that it
    will permanently expand it, so I believe this will work.  
    
    It should work pretty quickly too.  I have a pneumatic screw gun, and put
    the proper size socket over the end (the part you see on the right), and was
    able to expand and contract it quite quickly.  So I believe that, once I get
    it set up, I should be able to do what I need to do quickly, and in a
    controlled fashion.  
    
     
    
    I?ll give a further report to all who are interested once I secure the
    proper size pipe expander.  By the way, the 1 ?? size I have now would work
    well with those who prefer 2? hose.  
    
     
    
    Will
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Nick Gravagne
    Sent: Sunday, October 05, 2008 10:01 AM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Hi Will,
    
     
    
    
    Glad to help. Do your end caps look like these?  Go to
    http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B000BQ7VPA (Genova #31814 1-1/4" White MPT
    Plug)
    
    
     
    
    
    The threaded portion (barbs?) fits well enough into the hose I.D. with a
    little push, hammering, and turning with pliers. Fill up the threads with
    plumbers putty (the old fashioned gray stuff) and get the cap started in the
    hose. Through a combination of twisting, pushing and hammering with a small
    dead blow the cap will insert all the way.
    
    
     
    
    
    After you have the cap inserted about half way, the hammering technique
    involves (assuming you?re right handed) gripping the hose firmly in your
    left hand at the partially inserted cap thread area and tapping. Strange as
    this sounds it will work. Use hose/band clamps to tightly secure.
    
    
     
    
     
    
    Nick Gravagne, RPT
    
    Piano Technicians Guild
    
    Member Society Manufacturing Engineers
    
    Voice Mail 928-476-4143
    
     
    
      _____  
    
    From: pianotech-bounces@ptg.org [mailto:pianotech-bounces@ptg.org] On Behalf
    Of Will Truitt
    Sent: Saturday, October 04, 2008 3:07 PM
    To: 'Pianotech List'
    Subject: RE: Fitting fire hose to barbs
    
     
    
    Hi Nick:
    
     
    
    Your comments are very timely, and I am grateful for having them.  My end
    caps are supposed to be 1 ?? (See second paragraph below)
    
     
    
     
    
    Thanks for your remark about your using the 1.25? stuff for the end caps.
    I?ll head over to Lowe?s tomorrow morning and buy one or two barbs of that
    size and see if that is going to be a workable solution in a test fitting.
    If that seems to be the ticket, then I can go about securing some ones of
    sufficient quality.  
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Nick, how are you holding the hose to twist and hammer ? by hand?  I was
    finding that the hose wanted to fold over against the pressure of the barb
    against it instead of staying straight on.  I have some large channel lock
    pliers, so I will try that too.
    
     
    
     
    
     
    
    Thanks again for your help, and any further comments you have would be
    appreciated.  
    
     
    
    Will