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by lazide
1297 days ago
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The tape is so incredibly soft, it isn’t doing much on that front. You also don’t actually have a spiral leakage pattern with NPT if tightened appropriately- the fitting it self deforms to seal it. You need the tape or some other dope so the metal doesn’t gall when you do it. If you aren’t tightening it that tight, then yeah you’ll need rope or whatever. If you pull apart the fitting afterwards, it’ll be really clear you only end up with a tiny, nearly molecule thin layer of the PTFE at the inside of the fitting, if anything. |
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This contradicts every source I've read about NPT threads, e.g.
"NPT pipe thread design allows slight clearance between the thread crests and mating roots. This clearance creates a spiral leak path along the male thread crests. The spiral leak path is why NPT connections require a thread sealant to be leakproof."
https://www.industrialspec.com/about-us/blog/detail/npt-nptf...
"NPT, or National Pipe Thread (Taper) is an American standard for pipe connection dating back to the middle of the 1800s [...] they require a thread sealant, such as PTFE tape, to fill the spiral leak path inherent to the fitting;"
https://www.fluidpowerworld.com/why-is-leakage-still-a-probl...
Thoughts?