Search the forum,

Discuss Swaging spin tool. in the Plumbing Tools area at PlumbersForums.net

gmartine

Esteemed
Gas Engineer
Messages
2,340
Never really bothered too much with my manual swager but quite like this quick and tidy result, available in new year apparently.




























Nicked off Pb Plumber's instagram account, hate that guy....guns too big and van far too tidy, clearly plenty of time on his hands :)
 
Last edited:
as thay will be available in the new year i presume they will be for normal copper but as our copper has got thinner and thinner cant see why they wouldnt work
 
I am interested in this tool for my workshop. One of the first jobs I do with the newbies is to get them soldering and to save on fittings I'm using a very expensive Rothenberger socket forming set to do the job. It also keeps things nice and simple for new people learning to solder. My Rothenberger tool is ancient and seems to be going out of spec and over-sizing the sockets formed.

I'm definitely willing to give one of these a go.

As for this tool possibly only working for soft copper, I always get them to anneal the very end of the pipe for socket forming and preventing the tube from splitting. I think plumbers will not want to bother with that on site so if it works on half-hard tube it would be great. If this works without annealing then I'll be even happier with it.
 
1. I use the REMS Twist. Does the same thing, but purpose built with a pipe clamp.
2. Like the look of the spin tool, but without something to clamp the pipe clamp I think you'd need to be careful.
3. The REMS version will swage half-hard pipe without annealing (15 and 22), so I'd guess this one will.
4. The REMS one comes with some reddish lubricant, presumably to reduce friction between tool and pipe.
 
Interesting that you both mention annealing, this is taken from the bumf accompanying the imperial swage set above.

"The high-temperature method preserves the copper and aluminiums malleability while performing the swage preventing cracks and leaks and all in just 5 seconds."

Sure the tubing will heat up by the rotating bit but it's hardly high temp or enough to keep it soft or stop it from work hardening? Anyhow it seems to work on standard copper tubing so should prove a reasonable investment, the finish you get with a formed socket is rather neat as well as saving on a fitting.
 
Last edited:
Interesting that you both mention annealing, this is taken from the bumf accompanying the imperial swage set above.

"The high-temperature method preserves the copper and aluminiums malleability while performing the swage preventing cracks and leaks and all in just 5 seconds."

Sure the tubing will heat up by the rotating bit but it's hardly high temp or enough to keep it soft or stop it from work hardening? Anyhow it seems to work on standard copper tubing so should prove a reasonable investment, the finish you get with a formed socket is rather neat as well as saving on a fitting.
Most fridge pipe that folk use up to 7/8 in refrigeration is off soft coiled annealed rolls
 

Reply to Swaging spin tool. in the Plumbing Tools area at PlumbersForums.net

Similar plumbing topics

    • Like
We have 2 brand new cordless, battery powered press tools in stock, and flying off the shelves. Our TekTools TZ1930 & TZ1550 are packed with advanced features - these cordless press tools are engineered for speed, precision, and ease of use across various applications. Just reply to this thread...
Replies
4
Views
632
Hi guys. I'm trying to identify a toilet model before ordering a seat for a customer. I went to what used to be a Roca stockist (they no longer are) and one of the guys there reckoned it might be "The Gap". I went to the new stockist and the guy there disagreed it was "The Gap" and that he'd...
Replies
2
Views
102
Hi, My current hot water system needs to be replaced. Anyone got any suggestions or can recommend any plumbers around Derrimut area that won't rip me off? An office guy recommended me to apply for government rebates and get it installed through timetosave.com.au. How reliable is this...
Replies
2
Views
102
Our kitchen mixer tap has started dripping. Like so much of the plumbing in our almost new build bungalow, it is lacking! The plumber didn't install any isolating cocks in the H&C feed to the tap so how can I identify which of the valves is passing? Shut the whole H&C water system down?
Replies
7
Views
129
The fittings below are for a mixer bar attached to a self contained shower. i.e not a wall. The attaching screws have snapped. I could get two new brackets, dismantle that existing one and start again or I could try and re attach via those screws, removing the broken ones from the plate and wall...
Replies
0
Views
88
Creating content since 2001. Untold Media.

Newest Plumbing Threads

Back
Top
AdBlock Detected

We get it, advertisements are annoying!

Sure, ad-blocking software does a great job at blocking ads, but it also blocks useful features of our website. For the best site experience please disable your AdBlocker.

I've Disabled AdBlock