wroughtn_harv
Super Member
I've been using William's pipe knotcher for about fifteen years. As far as I'm concerned he's one of the most ingenious old farts to ever walk the face of the earth. His old catalogs were more of a neat magazine than a catalog.
I wasn't aware he had went back to making benders. He'd made some years ago but had so many problems with them that he pulled them from production. If he's got one out there now I'd bet anything it's a good one.
The Hossfield like he show's pictured doesn't have the pipe dies. But you can order dies for the Hossfield for anything. You want a die to bend one inch square tubing in a seventeen inch radius, they'll have it.
The down side of using the Hossfield for bending without it having the hydraulic attachment is you're using leverage. It comes with a bar and then an extension for that bar. So for bending inch and a half schedule forty your need the total eleven foot of bar they provide and as much a$$ as you can beg, borrow, or steal.
I wasn't aware he had went back to making benders. He'd made some years ago but had so many problems with them that he pulled them from production. If he's got one out there now I'd bet anything it's a good one.
The Hossfield like he show's pictured doesn't have the pipe dies. But you can order dies for the Hossfield for anything. You want a die to bend one inch square tubing in a seventeen inch radius, they'll have it.
The down side of using the Hossfield for bending without it having the hydraulic attachment is you're using leverage. It comes with a bar and then an extension for that bar. So for bending inch and a half schedule forty your need the total eleven foot of bar they provide and as much a$$ as you can beg, borrow, or steal.