The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips
Part 1: Tips 1 through 10
by John Stover
Director, Product Management & Product Regulatory Compliance
NewAge® Industries, Inc.
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 2
Introduction
It can be challenging to make sure
you’ve covered all the bases during
the plastic tubing and hose selection
process. Have you considered all
the elements involved with the
application? Temperatures,
chemicals, pressures, flexibility
needs? Have you ever ordered
hundreds, even thousands, of feet
of plastic tubing or reinforced hose
and then found it wasn’t the best
product for your application?
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips
were developed by NewAge Industries
to help avoid the downtime, costs, and
frustration involved with ordering the wrong
tubing or hose. The tips highlight details that can be
overlooked, present questions to ask your supplier, and
suggest research you can do to help avoid buying errors.
1. Check for ingredient approvals
You may need to know if the tubing or hose under consideration is
manufactured with FDA (Food and Drug Administration), NSF (National
Sanitation Foundation), USP Class VI (United States Pharmacopoeia),
3-A SSI (a food safety organization), or other association-approved
ingredients.
If this is the case, check the supplier’s tubing specifications for this
information. If you’re unsure whether the application calls for associa-
tion-approved ingredients, find out from an informed source, such as
the end user or product design engineer. Educate yourself about
required ingredient approvals to avoid the hassle of buying something
you may need to return.
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 3
2. Be aware of pressure or vacuum requirements
Applications can range from simple drainage lines, well handled by
gravity and involving virtually no pressure, to those requiring a robust
product able to manage full vacuum (29.9 in./Hg.).
You’ll need to consider whether your application is one of these
extremes or, more likely, one that falls in between. Some unreinforced
tubing can deal adequately with low pressure situations; others
cannot. It often depends on the tubing material and how hard or soft
it is (i.e., polypropylene or latex).
Reinforced hose is frequently called for in pressure
and vacuum applications. In fact depending on the
type of reinforcement (braid, fabric, stainless steel
wire, convolutions), certain types of reinforced hose
are well suited for pressure applications, while others
are better for vacuum.
If you’re unsure of your application’s pressure or
vacuum needs, you’ll need to ask questions, conduct
tests, or find out from an informed source. Research
the needs and usage to avoid situations where the
tubing or hose ruptures – or even explodes – because
it was not the right product for the application. Human
injuries can occur depending on the severity of the rupture.
3. Know the temperatures involved
Several things need to be investigated when it comes to tubing, hose,
and temperatures. The first item that usually comes to mind is
whether the tubing or hose being considered can withstand the
temperature of the product traveling through it, whether that product
is a liquid, gas, dry material, or even electrical wiring.
But you also need to think about the temperature of the environment
it’s in. Will the tubing be inside a controlled environment that’s kept at
a constant 72°F (22°C)? Will it lay next to other equipment that
throws off heat? Will the hose or tubing be outside and subject to both
Research needs
and usage to avoid
situations where
the tubing or hose
ruptures
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 4
heat and cold, plus variable sunlight? Will it need to operate and
remain flexible below freezing?
Another thing to keep in mind is that the higher the temperature, the
less pressure the tubing or hose can handle. Your application may be
well served with, for instance, 1/4” silicone tubing conveying water at
200°F and a working pressure of only 20 psi at 70°F. But if the
temperature increases to 300°F, your pressure handling capabilities
will decrease. Reinforced silicone hose should then be considered.
4. Consider flexibility and resistance to kinking
Flexibility is a property that varies greatly depending on the type of
plastic or rubber material and its construction. Factors that affect
flexibility include durometer (softness or hardness), force-to-bend,
size, wall thickness, reinforcement style, and temperature. Some
plastic tubing and hose, like that made from softer-durometer PVC or
polyurethane, is very flexible. Most rubber tubing such as silicone,
latex, and Viton™ is also flexible. Examples of harder durometer flexi-
ble plastic tubing include those made from nylon, fluoropolymers like
PTFE, polyethylene, and polypropylene. These are fairly stiff in their
common straight tubing styles but are bendable. Customization such
as coiling, convoluting, and corrugating can make them more flexible.
Some applications call for repeated flexing of the tubing or hose.
Situations involving robotics or circumstances where the tubing is
repeatedly moved require special consideration. The tubing or hose
must be durable enough to withstand such movements. Instances
where the tubing comes into contact with other equipment should be
examined as well. Many materials offer abrasion resistance and are
able to withstand repeated flexing and rubbing.
Closely related to flexibility concerns is kink resistance. If your
application calls for the tubing or hose to bend around machinery, its
resistance to kinking and collapsing upon itself must be considered.
Sometimes a very flexible material – silicone, for instance – can
address the issue. But if pressure and/or durability requirements will
not allow the use of such a soft material, the hose’s construction can
come into play. Braid or wire reinforcement can help to reduce the
occurrence of kinking, as can products that are multi-layered. Stiff
materials can also resist kinking provided that enough length is
incorporated into the design.
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 5
5. Consider weight
The weight of a tube or hose can have a big impact on a final product.
If you're designing or planning for, say, the aerospace industry, weight
can be critical. You need a product that will help keep overall equip-
ment weight at a minimum but one that can handle the job.
Tubing material, size, wall thickness, and reinforcement (if any) affect
its heaviness. For example, a typical 100 ft. coil of unreinforced
polyurethane tubing, 1" I.D. x 1-1/4" O.D., weighs about 21 lbs. A
similar size and length of reinforced PVC tubing weighs 35% more.
Multi-layered hoses – especially those incorporating
metal reinforcement – can be quite heavy. Add metal
fittings and clamps to form an assembly, and that
increases the weight further.
The overall weight of the tubing, reinforced hose,
and/or assembly components used in your application
must be examined. You'll want to make sure you
don't create a situation where a hose assembly's
weight pulls on other components such as fitting
connections. If your application involves a bulkhead,
you don't want the assembly putting a strain on the
entire system or structure.
Be sure to research and select a tubing product that meets your
application's requirements but doesn't add unnecessary weight.
6. Know whether the tubing or hose will impart a
taste or odor to the product flowing through it
If your application involves items such as foods, beverages, dairy
products, laboratory fluids, or medicines, any taste or odor transferred
to those products could be critical.
Some tubing and hose materials contain plasticizers (chemical agents)
to facilitate processing and aid in the flexibility of the finished tubing
or hose. Under certain circumstances these additives can leach out
The overall weight
of an assembly,
not only the
tubing, must be
considered
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 6
from the tubing or hose. They can appear in the streams conveyed by
the tubing or hose or possibly affect the stream with a taste or odor.
That may be fine if the line is used for drainage or a waste product,
but if the fluid is part of a finished product that someone will consume,
taste and odor transfer is a significant concern.
Certain tubing and hose materials (silicone and polyurethane, for
instance) are naturally flexible. There are no plasticizers used in their
manufacture, so the potential of taste and odor issues that can come
from the use of plasticizers is eliminated. In any case, if taste or odor
is a concern in your application, you should sample a candidate hose
or tubing to test if the material might affect your stream.
7. Determine whether the products being
conveyed must be seen within the tubing or hose
Do you need to see the flow of product through the tubing or hose to
check for consistency, progression, or to note
measurements? Perhaps the nature of the
application makes it undesirable to see
what’s inside, so an opaque color is
called for.
Do not assume that because one
style of a particular hose material
is crystal clear that all hose of
that material is the same. The
hose’s construction, whether it’s
reinforced with wire, braid, or
spirals, can greatly affect its
clarity. Several tubing products are
available in clear styles – PVC,
polyurethane, and some fluoropoly-
mers are examples. But when they’re in
the form of reinforced hose, their clarity
can be compromised.
Many tubing materials can be tinted or colored to varying degrees of
clarity. Clear or color-tinted transparent tubing allows light to pass
through so that objects within or behind can be easily seen. Some
tubing materials (silicone, polypropylene, latex) offer translucency and
allow light to pass through but not detailed images.
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 7
Other tubing, such as that made from Viton™, is available only in solid
colors. Materials like polyethylene and nylon are readily available in
colors and are often desired to identify transfer lines, conceal fluids
within, or coordinate with equipment.
8. Learn whether the tubing or hose can be
sterilized and reused
Plastic tubing is often considered a disposable item, but it doesn’t
always have to be. Learning whether the tubing or hose for your
application can be cleaned and used again can save you money.
Discover whether the tubing or hose can handle one or more standard
cleaning methods. Other important information to know is how many
cycles, or how many times, it may be cleaned using the same
procedure. Testing for your specific application is best.
Research the best cleaning method for the type of tubing material you
have in mind. Can it be autoclaved? Low-pressure steam sterilized?
Gamma irradiated? Cleaned with a specific chemical? Does the
application call for a simple flush cleaning with water?
Some plastic tubing materials such as polyurethane and PVC are quite
durable and chemical resistant. Other materials may handle high
temperatures well but not certain cleaning fluids or gases. Depending
on the tubing material and cleaning method used, tubing may become
brittle or gummy, break down chemically, loose its shape, or absorb
the cleaning agent.
Consider, too, that depending on the labor, equipment, and resources
involved with cleaning or sterilizing the tubing or hose, it may be more
efficient to replace it.
9. Evaluate surface characteristics
Many people naturally think of plastic as having a smooth surface. The
plastic products we use regularly (computers, toothbrushes, phones,
pens, cars, items from your kitchen) often have smooth, even glossy,
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 8
surfaces. In some cases the surface is textured
for aesthetic or gripping purposes.
What type of surface does the tubing or hose
in your application need? Whether your tubing
will carry fluid, air, or a granular or powdery
substance, you'll likely want a smooth interior
for the most efficient transfer. An irregular
surface can cause resistance and slow the
rate of flow.
Some thermoplastic tubing materials – PVC,
for example – offer a very smooth surface (a low
coefficient of friction). Others like fluoropolymer and
polyethylene are even smoother and feel almost slippery. Polyurethane
and certain thermoset rubbers such as silicone can feel tacky, and that
might be a desired characteristic in particular applications.
What about the exterior? Should it, too, be smooth, or does it need a
surface texture like ribbing to make it easier to grip and hold on to?
Some tubing styles, specifically stainless steel overbraided types, can
be supplied with a protective outer layer of silicone to make the prod-
uct easier to handle at high temperatures and to eliminate entrapment
issues. Other styles are coextrusions where one material is used for
the inside and another for the outside. For instance, Hytrel®-lined
PVC can be useful in a harsh environment application involving the
transfer of oil. The durability of PVC works well for the exterior, while
the oil resistance properties of Hytrel are a good fit for the interior.
Surface properties can also affect electrical conductivity and static
dissipation.
10. Know your packaging requirements
Are 100-foot coils of tubing or hose acceptable? Do you need 10,000
straight pieces, each five feet long? Must they be bagged, double
bagged for extra cleanliness, boxed, or are stacked coils on a wooden
pallet satisfactory? Can lengths of rigid products be cut and boxed to
meet requirements for shipping by UPS or a similar carrier, instead of
forcing a truck shipment?
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 9
Knowing how the tubing or reinforced hose will be used can help
determine your packaging needs. If it's going to be inventoried, you
may want a protective covering like a bag or box. If the tubing will be
used immediately, that may be unnecessary. Ask about bulk packaging
(multiple coils or lengths in one box), and see if it will save you money.
Perhaps the tubing is part of a kit that you assemble. You'd like six-
foot lengths of 1/8" I.D. clear, unreinforced PVC coiled into 4"
diameter circles, and then placed in individual bags and sealed. Order
it that way, so you don't need to do anything with it other than place
each bag with your kit.
Do you want the tubing bagged and labeled with your part number,
your customer's, or other useful information such as temperature
limitations? Will the tubing be used in a medical, pharmaceutical, or
other clean application? Check into having it gamma irradiated before
it ships to you, so it's ready for use upon delivery.
Consider the tubing's application and how the proper packaging can
assist the end user. Keep in mind that special packaging is a custom
process that will likely involve minimum order quantities, additional
lead time, and added costs.
Bonus Tip
Contact the Fluid Transfer Specialists® at NewAge® Industries for
your tubing, hose, and fitting needs.
Take advantage of our sales team’s knowledge and experience to help
you select the best products for your application. Our Sales Team
Members have been working in the industry for decades, and they
know plastic tubing.
Once you’re sure of what you need, benefit from millions of feet of
tubing and hose in inventory. Twenty-eight product lines in sizes from
1/64” I.D. through 4” I.D. are stocked, along with ten styles of fittings
and clamps. 99.9% of orders for in-stock product are shipped the
same day the order is placed. We also offer 99.6% order accuracy,
meaning you get what you need the first time . . . and that makes
your job (and ours) easier.
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips - Part 1: Tips 1 through 10 10
About NewAge Industries
In business since 1954, NewAge Industries manufactures and
fabricates thermoplastic and thermoset tubing in both reinforced and
unreinforced styles. The company offers an overall product quality
rating of 99.8%, provides extensive custom extrusion and fabrication
capabilities, and services customers worldwide. In 2006, NewAge
initiated an ESOP (Employee Stock Ownership Plan) for the benefit of
both its employees and customers.
Its AdvantaPure® division (www.advantapure.com) is ISO 9001:2008
certified and specializes in high purity tubing, hose, single use
systems, manifolds, and other molded components for the pharma-
ceutical, biologic, food, beverage, and cosmetics industries. NewAge’s
Verigenics® division (www.verigenics.com) focuses on automated
identification solutions that enable medical device, pharmaceutical and
other regulated companies to track and authenticate consumables,
assets, and equipment.
Sign up for our eNewsletter at www.newageindustries.com/extrusions
145 James Way • Southampton, Pennsylvania 18966 USA
888-506-3924 • 215-526-2300
www.newageindustries.com • [email protected]
NewAge®, Fluid Transfer Specialists®, NewAge Industries AdvantaPure® and Verigenics® are registered trademarks of NewAge® Industries, Inc.
Viton™ TM The Chemours Company • Hytrel® reg. TM E. I. du Pont de Nemours and Company
© Copyright 2016 All Rights Reserved. 7/20/16
Reproduction of this document or any part thereof, in any form whatsoever, is prohibited without express written permission of NewAge® Industries, Inc.
123c
Fluid Transfer Specialists®
Click here for Part 2 of the Top 20 Tubing &
Hose Buying Tips (Tips 11 through 20)
The Top 20 Tubing & Hose Buying Tips Part 1: Tips 1 through 10
Latest in Home