PVC Pipe Fittings Just For Building Stuff

If you’ve used PVC as a building material in your projects you may have run into trouble finding a way to make three pipes joint at right angles to each other (like the corner of a box outline). That’s because there’s no need for that type of joint when plumbing, the intended purpose of the PVC pipes. But [John] tipped us off about FORMUFIT PVC Fittings designed for construction use instead of plumbing. There’s a lot of interesting options, such as the ninety degree connectors, rounded end caps for aesthetics, and end caps designed to receive casters. We also enjoyed seeing the T connector that slides onto a pipe and can function as a swivel. We haven’t tried them out ourselves, but we think they’d come in hand whether you’re building complicated moving structures or just making a desk.

50 thoughts on “PVC Pipe Fittings Just For Building Stuff

  1. @luke

    $2 for a single fitting is allot of money
    go to lowes and get most of these same peaces for $0.60 a peace and you get that DIY feel
    im sorry im not paying 4X as much for a fitting i can get at every hardware store in america
    you also need to factor in shipping and all those DIY points you loose for taking a shortcut ;-)

  2. Yeah,
    $2 or even $1 for that matter is allot for a fitting and if you want artistic appeal you might want to use another material than PVC. Like metal tube because most PVC has those annoying red letters on them and there a pain to remove.
    And besides where is the fun in this?

  3. @biozz
    “im sorry im not paying 4X as much for a fitting i can get at every hardware store in america”

    The point is these are fittings you can’t get at ANY hardware store in America. I think I’ll find these quite useful for things like building small practice soccer goals.

    Instead of using a T connector and an elbow, a single piece from this company will cost about the same as both put together, look better, and require fewer glue joints, which have a tendency to fail when pvc is used outdoors in non-plumbing projects.

  4. @biozz
    do you really feel the need to disagree about everything?

    Legos are clearly superior to kenex. I would consider changing my mind if you can show me a kenex printer, a kenex autonomous battlebot, a kenex city, and a life-size kenex yoda.

  5. sure they look nice but i can buy the same fittings at home depot if i just sacrifice the sleekness
    like others said not one thing here can not be made from hardware store mass produced parts

  6. Good lord guys – these fittings are extremely cheap compared to the metal version (known as Kee Klamps). You can get those in aluminum or steel and they START at $5 a fitting and can easily go up to $15 – $20 each.

    But I guarantee you they are stronger than these :) They can take some serious loads. Also look at 80/20 – awesome stuff used a lot for industrial applications when you don’t want to engineer a solution because you are making one off units but really useful (expensive though!)

  7. i was raging hard when it was said that two dollars was expensive yet metal piping was an alternative. then i noticed quickly

    yalls been trolled

    “@anonymous
    where the hell did you get that?
    if your talking about the 6 joint it can be made with 2 4 joints making it $1.20 and thats just one peace
    im done here its dinner time,
    peace”

    peace peace, yep. troll

    on topic: these are pretty sweet.

  8. To the author: there are several companies that make these types of “DIY” fittings. I did a bunch of research last year and used PVCFittings.com for my project, but they aren’t the only ones out there. In fact, my project required a 6-way and I don’t see that listed from the vendor in the article.

    What we really need is someone who will make threaded PVC fittings (UV resistant) that use left-hand threads; I talked to a bunch of manufacturers, and apparently no-one makes them. Next step, buy a riprap and make my own…

  9. This is called a bunch of people doing a lot of useless bitching and moaning instead of building stuff or even bothering to apply themselves to utilization fantasies.

    No, it’s much better for everyone to find something to cry about. LOL -pathetic- on a hack site if you ask me.

    Personally I’m thinking how much easier it’s going to be for my brothers and sisters in amateur radio to make some of the home-brew beam designs in an enclosure that can stand up to some weather and/or being moved around, just for starters.

    Everything is bad for you. You start dying the moment you are born.
    WAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

    Shut up and hand me the glue, or at least make a coffee run for the builders, okay?

  10. thank you octel!

    “pvc is horrible for you and horrible for the environment as a whole”.

    Chemical PVC is not even “plastic” without the addition of

    And this doesn’t start with toxical additives needed to make anything stable/useful out of Polyvinylchloride: The “invention” of using PVC as plastic is based on the idea to get rid of chemical wastes/byproducts from other processes*.

    Burn some PVC and you get hydrogen chloride as a gas. Solve this in Water and you have hydrochloric acid. Hydrogen chloride is cool in labs, not our lungs.

    I won’t judge the random maker using cheap material for prototyping their inventions. But please don’t go pubicly partying about the cheap price of PVC without mentioning the reasons. It was born as waste, and it will end up in waste.

    I think toymakers in the US and Europe had to get rid of PVC. (Good) Computer makers are stopping using it. The EU is talking about making it an illegal material as a whole. I bet there are some informative sites on the net that hackaday could link to, next time PVC makes it into a headline.

    i think this is my first comment on the internet in 2010. So: Hello World.

    //kuuk

    ———————-
    *German wikipedia article on PVC mentions this in the History paragraph about Fritz Klattes work at Hoechst/Griesheim-Elektron. English Wikipedia is missing that information. Any Wikipedians here?

  11. not only do i agree with the face that legos are better than kenex but i think when u go into a lowes or a hardware store you end up seeing 10 other things that make you go, YOU KNOW WHAT I COULD DO WITH THAT! i would much rather wander around lowes for 3 hours than spend 10 min on that site to over pay for them pvc parts.

  12. Formufit say they’re happy to ship to any country, but did anyone tell them the rest of the world uses the METRIC system? Using their search box brings up no hits at all for ‘metric’. So they’ve effectively got NO market outside of the USA.

  13. @ Mr N.

    Actually they would have a pretty large customer base outside of the US. The UK, Australia and Canada still us the English system for PVC, as well as many countries that import the pipe from those countries (South Africa). Also, if you do your research on Nominal Pipe Size (NPS) you will see that there is crossover between Metric and English fittings. Quit your hating.

  14. so when i was a kid i have a set of pvc pipes with these joints, but the joints were brightly colored. you could make carts and forts and stuff out of it. anybody remember what this was called? (also on the kenex vs. lego debate, anyone remember construx? Those things were doing simple mechanics in the 80’s, how i miss childhood)

  15. PVC is a great building material . You can also make your own fittings out of regular pvc pipe fittings and a radial arm saw. Cutting parts in half, quarters and joining them. As long as the seems are tight you can glue them with the same pipe cement to make one new fitting.

    The best toys but harder to find now, for home prototyping is erector sets. the orignals from the 60’s and 70’s can sometimes be found at yard sales. They were all steel and metal and includes bolts and screws for the joints. Awesome for building robots.

    In 1949, an Erector Set was used to build the precursor to the modern artificial heart by Drs. William Sewell and William Glenn of the Yale School of Medicine. The external pump successfully bypassed the heart of a dog for more than an hour.

  16. Well I for one am glad to see this. I’ve built a lot of things with PVC tubing and fittings from Lowe’s or Home Depot like robot chassis, material racks, and electronics enclosures (think pipe bombs, sans the boom) — (strangely, no furniture), and some shapes just can’t be configured with the parts they have available at the hardware stores. Some of them can be bodged together with a few parts, but then you’re taking up more physical space (smaller is better in most cases), and it looks sloppy.

    Thanks to everyone for all the links to places dedicated to making the oddball shapes that aren’t covered by the big box stores.

    @Legos v. Kinex: Legos. They even do CNC fabrication machines (well, sorta).

    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7Z1SsCl5OPY

  17. @pall.e and Deebster

    I believe you’re referring to Omagles; there are still some in my parents’ garage, and I used to love them. A Google Images search on Omagles turns up lots of examples.

  18. Just for those who don’t khnow what is “Pipe fitting” : is the occupation of installing or repairing piping or tubing systems that convey liquid, gas, and occasionally solid materials. This work involves selecting and preparing pipe or tubing, joining it together by various means, and the location and repair of leaks.

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