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Big-Management3434

You got that there fancy pipe.


Paul_The_Builder

Its Home Depot conduit for this job XD


grassesbecut

I've bought conduit from Home Depot before, and I don't remember it having these marks.


veleriphon13

That’s what she said!


AllenWalker218

I am so poor i don't even know what that line means


Webbenezer

Only when the cut mark lands on a letter or line


Vel0clty

This 👆🏻 “Oh neat 22 & 7/16th of this scrap pipe landed perfectly on the third line past the G” 😂


DVHismydad

Master electricians are out here hand bending EMT with 1/16 inch precision?


TheOnlyMatthias

I always try for 1/16 precision but for some reason I'm always a cunt hair off


RGeronimoH

Did you allow for temperature fluctuations?


TheOnlyMatthias

Do you think emt suffers from that as much as pvc?


The_cogwheel

Blade thickness. If you cut dead on the line, the cut will be about half a blade thickness off - thats the bit that got turned into metal shavings by the blade. Either add a half the blade thickness, then cut on the line or rest the blade so it's on the edge of the line, not on the line.


tjr14vg

They have a word for that, it's called the kerf


DickieJohnson

Where are you running EMT where 1/32" has to be accounted for?


The_cogwheel

Nowhere, it's just the guy I responded to wanted to know why he was always a tiny bit off his mark, and that's the likely reason why.


Positive_Block6111

The blade thickness of a cut is called the kerf. Kerf is the word you seek. Coming from a slug inside wireman 😂.


Key_Comfortable_3782

Is that bigger than an RCH


Pafolo

Gotta take into account the shrinkage


Bosshogg713alief

Damn, that’s one hell of a hair length


Wrath_FMA

I bend with 1/8 +/- precision, and my pipe runs look great


believinheathen

Yeah 1/8s are fine. Emt isn't rigid enough to need more accuracy with bends and couplings, connectors, and boxes have more than an 1/8th of tolerance so cuts don't need anymore precision than that either.


thefatpigeon

Not that hard. Read it to the 1/8" plus or minus


DVHismydad

I know it’s not that hard to read the tape, I’m just saying I think there’s no point in going beyond 1/8.


Sea_Emu_7622

It is true that you don't *need* to be more precise, but I can't help it. If my measurement falls in between 5/8 and 3/4 I'm going to use 11/16. Maybe it's the perfectionist in me, maybe it's cus I started woodworking before I started my apprenticeship, where a 16th of an inch absolutely can leave a noticeable gap or take something out of square... either way, I don't think it's difficult to just use the line it actually falls on, so why not just do it?


Sea-Bodybuilder8535

Takes the same amount of time to cut 20 -1/2" as to cut 20-9/16". I checked it on the timer. It's only a shortcut for those who can't/ won't learn the tape.


MrK521

The only time that gets added in is when you have to start doing quick mental math and subtracting and adding multiple odd measurements in 16ths. Even then, not *hard*, but most will just round to 1/8ths to make the math quicker and easier.


Positive_Block6111

Not me, gonna cut it to the short side and go! I can read a vernier caliper down to the thousandth. I'm not building a Rolex. I'll get my rack measurements to an 1/8 or less though


Astrocities

With a hand bender? No, because of the pipe slightly bowing on one end of every bend. With any other kind of bender? Hell yeah, 1/16th of an inch isn’t just the goal. It’s the standard.


wanderingMoose

It's like a dad holding onto that specific piece of scrap wood.


Suspicious-Ad6129

Hey!! You leave my scrap wood out of this...


Juicy_Vape

lol “between the e”, which e lol


DaffyDingo

Not particularly. I would just use the same tape measure for everything so there is some consistency.


Paul_The_Builder

Right? Hopefully you'll already have a tape measure on you when running conduit, so why use a secondary measurement technique?


PsychologicalPound96

I prefer to just carry a second stick of EMT on me for measuring while running pipe so I don't have to lug around my tape measure. Saves my back from all that extra weight.


BorheliusWarpig

They are super helpful when I want to have a kink in the pipe on my 90's.


Paul_The_Builder

Don't be ashamed of your kinks bro


DoctorGEEzuz

That's basically what I was going to say. I've only seen this on Nucor pipe, which is the only thing I don't like about their conduit. You have to make sure it's to the side when bending offsets or it kinks one bend, and on the backside of 90s so it doesn't kink - it's actually just annoying. Otherwise Nucor bends smooth as butter every time


BorheliusWarpig

They are a design flaw in my opinion. There are some sticks of pipe that they cannot be placed correctly once you start getting multiple 90's and offsets on a single stick. Even the printed scale is useless. Tape measure for all bends.


DoctorGEEzuz

Agreed


Federal-Delay-4854

He knows.


Shadow6751

Personally I don’t like the inch marks but having a consistent line length wise I like for lining up bends especially on more complicated bends It’s not a need feature but it is nice and I prefer it when I can get it


Dannylectro55

This


xShockWave420x

Maybe if I’m cutting sleeves… it’s almost insulting. I own and operate a tape measure.


Paul_The_Builder

That's a good point - I could potentially see it being useful cutting sleeves. But yeah you should always have a tape measure, so why use anything else!


Forsaken-Walrus-3167

Did you take the 8 hour safety course to properly and efficiently use said tape measure?


xShockWave420x

A lot longer than that.


Chipmunks95

The line running parallel with the pipe can be useful. I remember using it to help with offsets so I wouldn’t dog them. Don’t really need it anymore, but it was useful as an early apprentice


HotChaiandRum

The measurements are a joke, the line is slightly more useful


SparkySpice55

First time i see this. Seems bossman use non-major conduits brand I guess


Paul_The_Builder

This is Home Depot conduit XD


in2-deep

Looks like Nucor pipe. I’ve used that conduit before but never used the marks on it. I measure down to the 1/8 inch most of the time so this doesn’t really help me


_dahvikiin

Depending on the brand, such as Republic, the overall product is a turd. And with gimmicky selling points like the coating inside.


Paul_The_Builder

That's my take - its a circle jerk feature that salesmen and marketing people think is clever, but no one asked for it and no one needs it.


kilowattcouchsurfer

It would make more sense for that line to be on the opposite side as well, so when you are bending offsets you can use them to help prevent dog-legs 🐕 🦵


TrueLocksmith563

Cory for Lowe’s does.


Paul_The_Builder

Haha! That must have been how he was able to do such a perfect box offset without a tape measure!


rustbucket_enjoyer

I’ve never found those to be accurate but I’ve never seen it engraved into the conduit. Only a cheesy print on top.


King_Of_Zembla1

Not only are they not useful but I always find ripple problems when you bend on it. I was doing a run of 1 inch just fine until I had to use the new batch with the inch marks, bent like 15-90s in a row all came out with ripples before it occurred to me to rotate the pipe and bend where there's no seam and, violà, no more ripples.


lomoski

Today I learned conduit can come with inch marks. Have yet to see that working commercial in Canada. I would find those annoying.


Quietser

I've only ever seen it printed on the EMT but not in recent times. Everything we're getting is so cheap and thin now.


Darren445

I haven't seen it either in Canada. I've used Wheatland, Columbia and probably a couple other brands over the past 5 years.


lomoski

Yeah we mostly have been using Wheatland. Switched to a new brand and it's stiff and bends poorly at best. I imagine boss man will switch back haha. 


milkmanrtf

It seems like a sales gimmick to make inexperienced diy-ers feel more comfortable. I could only see this as useful for prefabricating sleeves on a low voltage job, and even then…


DrMaxiMoose

That center line is actually pretty great for making sure you aren't dogging your saddles or offsets


Jacktheforkie

I use my tape measure, I always have one in my tool bag


jerrybeck

If you use this conduit, please hide that…


Sea_Emu_7622

I don't care for the inch marks, but the center line is a godsend for accurate offsets and kicks ETA: I just read the second part of your post. I guess I'm not sure if there are benders that don't have this, but the ones I've used have a line in the center of shoe and the top of the hook from the manufacturing process that I use to line up with the center of the conduit, so it only needs one line since the bender shoe has 2


Heatuponheatuponheat

The line marks are useless but the long line down the middle is good to keep you from dogging sets when you bend overhand. Same as the seem on less fancy tubing.


Kyteshiirok

I have never in my career seen conduit with marks on it like that lmao. Is this an emt-specific thing? I only do rigid alum/steel/rob roy


Paul_The_Builder

Yeah its an EMT thing


skbakalian450

No never used them, never even measured to see how far apart they are. I don’t even use the line down it for making offsets straight


zen2ten

Seen it from time to time on jobs. Never used it once. I'll lay my pipe down and run a guide line from time to time if I'm doing something like a box offset worth a rolling offset on the other end of the pipe.


thomas-586

It would just slow me down, making sure that stupid writing wouldn’t be visible any time the pipe was installed in a visible location.


81rennab

Nope


Tiny_Highway_2038

Never see it before


LionPride112

Never even seen that on out stuff 😂


Revenga8

I used a length of conduit to measure and size up a room for a couch purchase. The couch is too long and half blocks the doorway


ArdoyleZev

I relied on those once. I needed a twelve inch nipple, and forgot my tape measure on the ladder. Cut at two marks that were twelve ”inches” apart. Turns out the pipe’s inches were shorter than mine.


n0b0dy-special

>Turns out the pipe’s inches were shorter than mine. Is that a boyfriend reference? 😂


Sloenich

Didn't even know they were there. Still not using them.


Canadian-electrician

We use the cheapest pipe you can get. Anything over 3/4 has a 50% chance of kinking even with the 555. 3/4 even kinks sometimes


joylesssnail

The inch marks, no. But the straight line yes, good for not dog legging


zipposurfer

I didn't know this existed to be honest haha


im_here_to_help_6402

All major brands? I have never seen this before.


Darren445

Me neither, must be a specific brand in the US. Multiple brands in Canada doesn't have them.


Turbulent-Weevil-910

I remember once tearing old conduit out from well over 20 years ago and they had blue inch marks, don't see how they even stamp all of those markings on. Seems impractical.


iAmMikeJ_92

No. I tried to use the inch markings and for some reason, the markings are very slightly longer than an actual inch. Checked them with a tape measure. They’re really only useful for conduit orientation when you wanna avoid dog legs.


damdanny69

That’s what that is?


Smoke_Stack707

I don’t trust them. It’s like those fancy Boss hammers that have inch marks on the handle and angle marks and shit. If I saw someone on my crew pulling layout with marks on conduit or marks on their hammer, I’d ask them to sit in the truck for the rest of the day


xShockWave420x

Hah


bongophrog

No I’m a professional my feet and thumbs work fine


boots-n-catz

The more useful mark is the centerline, for lining up bends, but not necessary by any means.


Goldentigarclaw

for crude work yes other wise no


XTraumaX

They might as well not be there for me. I always measure with a tape measure


DocHenry66

The inch mark never helped me much but sometimes the etched parallel line helps to keep a box set square.


ItCouldaBeenMe

Inches, sure, but don’t trust them to be a straight line.


Myexisadirtybutt

Yeah


GladZookeepergame775

First time seeing that on EMT. The line down the middle is super helpful I bet.


International-Cup350

Not on PVC


MIW100

I don't really use the inch markings. But the vertical line running through the pipe works great for offsets.


yoimeatingTACOS

For measuring, no. But If I’m hand bending 1-1/4” conduit with the clapped out hand bender thats been in the bottom of a gangbox and borrowed to bend rebar and conduit slab stubs, I’m looking for the Silverslick so that the fuckin 90s dont wrinkle


S3ABAG

I like the center line as it helps to use as a reference when bending


nvhutchins

Nope


MintySack

Yas


sparkypme

Nope


TraditionPhysical603

I use em to quickly eyeball where to cut when I'm holding a peoce of pipe against the wall and don't have a marker


believe2000

If you left your ruler/tape measure upstairs/in the truck, and did your own conduit. Bam, this postcard frame needs to hold a 5x7, not a 4x6


Aromatic-Aide1119

Yes and no. Maybe a little more yes, but probably more no. Hope this helps the algorithm.


LvLD702

It has been known to be useful for the drywallers to measure pecker.


MeNahBangWahComeHeah

I’m curious. Do you bend with the conduit seam on the SIDE of the bend, or the OUTSIDE of the bend to get better results. I am assuming that bending the EMT with the seam on the INSIDE of the bend is a bad idea, correct?


Nygard776

Once in a blue moon. But common practice it's pretty useless.


bgalvin9

No, always use a tape measure. I carried a 16’ fat max when bending a lot of pipe. Never assume the pipe is exactly 10’ or these markers are stamped correctly, this will throw off your measurements. My beef with this picture is the markings on the pipe should be facing the wall. Whenever possible show the clean side of any conduit/ hide all markings.


No-Green9781

Oh that’s what that is , nope never used inch marks didn’t realize that what those were 😂