That is true about the new pipe but the working pressure from a air compressor is a fraction of the bursting pressure rated with a new pipe. Then when a pipe is broken there is not shrapnel flying all over the shop. I've have been within 10' of a pipe break on three occasions and all it did was make a lot of noise. The pipe could have been glued back together if there was an adhesive that would hold with all of the plastic there. It breaks like a pipe broken from freezing water. The pipes breaking is from them being poorly installed. The shops that I worked in would run a pipe down a column and put an elbow on it where they put a coupler. Then the pipe was attached to the column with duct tape or a zip tie. In my own shop I weld a steel plate to an steel elbow and attach that to the column and run PVC from there. I've never had a pipe break in my own shop and some of the pipe dates back to the mid 1980's and some of this pipe has been exposed to the Texas sun for more than a decade.
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Today's Featured Article - The Ferguson System Principal An implement cutting through the soil at a certain depth say eight inches requires a certain force or draft to pull it. Obviously that draft will increase if the implement runs deeper than eight inches, and decrease if it runs shallower. Why not use that draft fact to control the depth of work automatically? The draft forces are
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