PVC pipe is a great material for making things.  If you ever need to bend the pipe, here's how to do it.

The trick is to fill it with sand before heating the plastic and bending it.   Normally, the pipe would pinch closed in areas where it is bent, but the sand prevents that.  When the heat forming is finished, you just drain out the sand. 

 
Remove these adsRemove these ads by Signing Up

Step 1: Safety while heating PVC

WORKING PVC (46).JPG
We love plastics for what they do for us, but plastic manufacture and decay tend to pollute the environment and negatively affect our health.

Vinyl Chloride, one of the components of PVC, is carcinogenic. When it is locked up in the polymer, however, it is much safer to be around. In my years of experience working with PVC, I have not noticed any adverse effects on my health from being around it.

Always work in areas with good ventilation. If you do get caught in a cloud of smoke, hold your breath and move to clean air.

When heating PVC with a gas stove or propane torch, try not to let it burn. Smoke from burning PVC is bad. With experience one burns it less and less. Don't panic the first time you do burn some. It scorches, but doesn't immediately burst into flame. Move the material away from the flame and try again. Don't breathe the smoke. Smoke avoidance comes naturally for most people.

While heating PVC over a gas flame, keep the plastic an appropriate distance from the flame to avoid scorching the surface before the inside can warm up. It takes time for heat to travel to the center of the material being heated.

Keep the plastic moving, and keep an eye on the state of the plastic. When heated, the PVC material is flexible, like leather. Beyond this stage, you risk scorching it.

A word from James, the plastic engineer -- "Just a word of warning, PVC can handle some high heats but if it catches fire, you wont be able to put it out, it does not need oxygen to burn so don't do this inside".

I do work inside, but my house is made of cement and has good ventilation. MAKE SURE THAT YOU HAVE GOOD VENTILATION. PLAY WITH FIRE -- CAREFULLY.
1-40 of 110Next »
maveric__fil says: Nov 21, 2012. 2:42 AM
Epic instructable! i never would have thought you would have to put SAND in it. Thanks!
07reisdaydar says: Jul 18, 2012. 5:34 PM
Thanks for the instructable, i will use this to make the sump return for my marine tank!
AntMan232 says: Jun 19, 2010. 9:28 AM
I don't like to put a damper on things, but as far as i know, when you heat PVC you get chlorine gas, which is poisonous. I just thought i'd let you know, but its probably too late...!
jack8559 in reply to AntMan232May 3, 2012. 8:23 AM
I'm not sure, but pvc may also give off cyanide gas when overheated. I'm sure that many plastics do give off this gas and it is a very real danger to inhale it. Any super glue that contains cyanoacrylate will certainly give off cyanide gas when burned and many plastics manufacturing processes include stuff like this in their products. PLEASE be careful when heating plastics and always have a lot of ventilation - use a fan if you have one even outside, no need to take chances with your life over a piece of plastic!
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to jack8559May 3, 2012. 6:27 PM
Check it out, if you are not sure, and let us know. Poly-Vinyl-Chloride doesn't sound like cyanide to me.

I agree that there are no known health benefits to breathing burning plastic. The art, not a difficult one to learn, is to not burn the plastic when you soften it. Yes, good ventilation is always important.
yellowcatt in reply to AntMan232Apr 14, 2012. 9:20 AM
You would need a lot of direct heat to form toxic gas, I have bent lots of PVC with no problems at all. The bending temperature is about 100 to150°C and it takes a temperature of about 390°C or more to char PVC.

If forced to burn PVC will not produce chlorine but will emit dense acrid fumes containing noxious and toxic compounds including carbon monoxide, hydrogen chloride and possibly dioxins.
However PVC will not burn on its own, it needs continuous applied heat to char it.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to AntMan232Jun 19, 2010. 11:59 AM
Well, I know how chlorine smells and I have never smelled chlorine while heat forming PVC. Of course that is below burning temperature. If you burn PVC, yes, you get some nasty fumes. The fumes don't smell like chlorine to me, but they probably contain chlorine. With fumes that smell so bad, I never hang around to analyze the aroma in detail. Anyway, and I swear I'm not lying, I'm still alive!
AntMan232 in reply to ThinkensteinJun 20, 2010. 7:58 AM
If you insist, i'm a bit doubtful about the last comment, but i'd better take your word for it!
Funk_D says: Jan 21, 2010. 10:45 AM
This is awesome! Just this morning I was trying to think of a way to bend some PCV I have to make a bike rack so I didn't have to go buy 90 degree joints! Thank you!

Also, do you think this method would work with copper piping? I need to bend some into a radiator shape but I can't figure out how.
yellowcatt in reply to Funk_DApr 14, 2012. 9:40 AM
Copper pipe can be bent cold using a bending spring. These are only three or four pounds each but you do need the right size for the pipe.
If you had a spring the right size then you could use it with heat for bending PVC pipe.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to Funk_DJan 21, 2010. 5:01 PM
I think copper pipe has been bent cold with sand inside.  Pack it tight and give it a try. 
crashrandall in reply to Funk_DJan 21, 2010. 1:30 PM
 If you get ductile copper tubing, it is bendable without heat.  The straight stuff is not so bendy though, and is prone to cracking and creasing instead of bending clean.
jcksparr0w says: Mar 29, 2012. 2:36 PM
to improve this instructable, you can also heat you PVC with a heat gun(used in art for embossing paper or other materials). Much less chance of fire, much safer, and works about as well. Good idea to post this though.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to jcksparr0wMar 29, 2012. 6:21 PM
A heat gun is fine. Not everybody has a heat gun, though. Propane torches and gas stoves are more common.

You can play with fire and not get burned. You just have to be careful. Keep work moving to avoid hot spots, and at an appropriate distance from the flame.
Ryutso says: Jan 20, 2012. 11:39 AM
Is there a way to reduce the wrinkling on the inside of the curve?
yutzwagon says: Jun 21, 2010. 7:28 PM
This looks pretty cool. I wanted to make a boffer kukri, so I think this should work well. Thanks a lot!
black hole in reply to yutzwagonOct 27, 2011. 11:40 AM
I made a falcata (a sword with a blade shape similar to that of kukri's) and it works fine as a boffer.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to yutzwagonJun 21, 2010. 8:38 PM
You're welcome. Apparently, a kukri is a curved knife. I don't understand the reasoning behind shaping a knife like that. If I recall correctly, boffers used to be sort of foam swords people could boff each other with, without hurting each other. If I was crossing a boffer with a kukri, I'm not sure what I would get. So how does bending PVC pipe work into making a boffer kukri?
asda1246 in reply to ThinkensteinFeb 21, 2012. 11:42 PM
the drop in a kukri's blade is to help chopping power and there has been stories of Gurkha kukri's chopping a man from skull to pelvis in a single stroke
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to asda1246Feb 22, 2012. 8:23 AM
I'll keep that in mind next time I have a similar task.
mli3 in reply to ThinkensteinAug 9, 2011. 5:37 PM
I think a Kukri is more of an axe hatchet knife combo. The curved edge makes it easier to cut.
ingvar in reply to ThinkensteinSep 3, 2010. 5:59 AM
I suspect the PVC forms the solid core that the foam is then attached to.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to ingvarSep 3, 2010. 6:47 AM
Thanks. It seems like it could still hurt, though. I don't think the old boffers had any solid cores. They were just thicker at the handle and more flexible at the tip. Maybe there was something solid in the handle, though.
ingvar in reply to ThinkensteinSep 3, 2010. 8:35 AM
All the boffers I've built in the past had a solid core, but with a decent amount of foam everywhere except the handle (and usually using an all-foam cross-piece).
Phil B says: Sep 19, 2011. 3:51 PM
Bending PVC and then cutting it in half along its length is a reasonable way to save a bunch of money on making your own lightweight and very durable bicycle fenders. Get some 1/8 inch rod to bend and attach for supports.
ilpug says: Aug 9, 2011. 7:11 PM
amazing. after the PVC is heated and bent, does it retain it's pressure rating?
alxsmpgmr95 says: May 13, 2010. 10:18 AM
i was wonderiing what else could be used to heat the pipe if you don't have a gas stove?
ComplacentBard in reply to alxsmpgmr95Aug 9, 2011. 6:07 PM
I have used a heat gun. Its like a super hairdryer.
ahmad2117 says: May 30, 2010. 8:53 AM
do you have a way to make 1 cemicircle out of pvc and 1 other with the exact same curve
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to ahmad2117May 30, 2010. 4:22 PM
If you are talking about a flat semicircle, you have to cut the side of a pipe section, and heat it to open it up flat.  Put it on the floor with a piece of plywood in top to hold it flat until it cools.  Then use a paper pattern with the semicircle you want to trace and cut. 

If you want to bend pipe into an exactly repeatable curve, you need something round to bend it around.  Ideal would be a shape like a pulley wheel with a channel for the pipe to be pulled into as you wrap it around.  That would help reduce flattening on the inside, keeping the pipe cross-section rounder. 

You might be able to make such a round pulley wheel shape out of wood, if you have a router to gouge out the channel in the wood.  That gets pretty high-tec with the need for tools, though. 
zappenfusen says: May 4, 2010. 8:54 PM

The Pipe Viper looks great for bends 30" apart giving leverage to put a bend in PVC. I wonder about bending tight offsets though. A 3" inch offset requires 30 degree bends 6" a part. Add other tight bends in a 10' conduit & you'd have to be superman. It looks like a great tool & I don't understand why the Electrical suppliers haven't pushed it.

 

Zappenfusen  

hjartland says: Jan 22, 2010. 12:25 AM
Hope this hasn't been asked yet ... How strong is it after bending? Does it retain the same "spring" like quality? Does it become brittle?
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to hjartlandJan 22, 2010. 7:10 AM
Good questions. 

As far as I can tell, it is just as strong after bending as before.  Chemically, I don't think you break any of the polymer chains by softening the plastic, or bending it. 

Yes, it seems to be just as springy.

It doesn't become brittle. 

Interestingly, it does seem to have some "memory" of its original shape.  If you heat it up again, it tends to return to the way it was. 

I imagine the original shape was a liquid mass of goo, but the first time it is shaped is as pipe.  If you just soften it to stretch it, heat it again and it unstretches. 

Someone at the PVC factory told me once that they never have any 2nd quality pipe, because if it is defective, they just reprocess it.  From that, I imagine that you can take solidified PVC and melt it again, probably in the absence of oxygen.

You can weld it somehow with a hot air gun and a special tip, but I never had any luck with that. 
DrCoolSanta in reply to ThinkensteinJan 22, 2010. 8:04 PM
I don't know about anything else, but I remember the thing about the memory...
I don't know the science behind it too, but plastics tend to have a memory of the shape they were in before...
There was a video on youtube that showed someone heating a yoghurt cup in an oven and it returned to the disk like shape they melt to form the cups... 
Capt. Kidd in reply to DrCoolSantaApr 29, 2010. 4:47 PM
lol u REMEMBER the thing about the MEMORY... how ironic
Aquilla in reply to ThinkensteinJan 22, 2010. 12:58 PM
I don't work in a PVC factory, but I'm fairly sure PVC is a thermoset, not a thermoplastic, so reprocessing defective polymer would require some rather specific solvents, as opposed to just heating it and resetting it.
FrozenFire in reply to AquillaJan 8, 2011. 5:22 AM
That's incorrect, seeing as PVC is sold as prills/granules by the manufacturers.
Wikipedia also mentions that it's a thermoplastic.
smokehill says: Feb 2, 2010. 7:41 PM
I have not personally tried it, but I've spoken to commercial plumbers that have bent PVC pipe with the exhaust from their work trucks.  I'm not sure this would work for very tight curves without something on the inside (sand, springs, etc), and I think they were talking about 45-degree angle bends, or less, to make runs of pipe match up without fittings (especially if it was a strange angle for which fittings don't exist).

As I recall, the idea was to stick the PVC pipe up the exhaust pipe and gradually bend it, making the angle appear at the end of the exhaust pipe.
Thinkenstein (author) in reply to smokehillFeb 3, 2010. 6:40 AM
Interesting idea.  Thanks for sharing it. 

Years ago, I read of some Boy Scout leader who built a little oven around the exhaust pipe.  They put food in at the beginning of a trip and it was ready when they arrived.  Seems like it would have to be gas tight to avoid contamination of the food.  Anyway, it seems like a creative use for exhaust heat. 
The Bottomless Paddling Pool in reply to ThinkensteinFeb 27, 2010. 3:57 PM
That reminds me: When my father was in high school he would heat his lunches and drinks during winter on the school's transformer cases from it's own power plant. I've always liked that.
1-40 of 110Next »
Pro

Get More Out of Instructables

Already have an Account?

close

PDF Downloads
As a Pro member, you will gain access to download any Instructable in the PDF format. You also have the ability to customize your PDF download.

Upgrade to Pro today!