Solder ring fitting

A solder ring fitting, also known by the trademarked name Yorkshire fitting,[1] is a pre-soldered capillary connector for joining copper pipes used in plumbing.[2]

Operation

To obtain perfect joins, the inside of the fitting and the outside of the copper pipe are cleaned using coarse steel wool, flux paste is applied, the pipe is inserted into the fitting and heat applied from a portable propane torch until a ring of solder shows at the edges of the fitting. To obtain a durable joint, water must not be poured on the solder joint to cool it. Yorkshire fittings are now made with lead-free solder.

The fittings come in a great variety of configurations, such as Tee-pieces, straight couplers, elbows or bends, reducers (to join pipes of different diameters), stop-ends, and there are versions with screw threads (male or female) at one end to fit taps and galvanized iron pipes.

Valves such as stoptaps & gate valves are also available in solder ring configuration.

gollark: It overlaps with my avatar! I resent this.
gollark: Are there *any* known examples of SolarFlame5 being right, ever, under any circumstance?
gollark: And yet.
gollark: It is. You're just wrong.
gollark: I only mention communism metaironically.

See also

  • Sweat fitting

References

  1. Yorkshire, retrieved 2020-08-10.
  2. Boyce, Robert Michael; Masterman, Arnold (2005), Plumbing: a practical guide for level 2, Nelson Thornes, p. 151, ISBN 978-0-7487-9275-7.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.