--------------- In piping engineering practice, according to the service, fluid, design pressure and design temperature thing are (Piping material, pressure rating of the flanges, pipe thickness, type of joint, etc) are classified and tabulated. This is called pipe class.
schedule is the thickness of the pipe and class is pressure/temperature rating of a fitting or pipe
The main difference is the thickness of the pipe Compare to A Class pipe B Class pipe thickness is more.Like that Compare to B class pipe C Class pipe thickness is more.
The difference between schedule 40 and 80 pvc is the wall thickness and schedule 80 is thicker then schedule 40 so the higher the schedule number the thicker the wall of the pipe thus can hold more pressure.
The gauge of the pipe is the wall thickness. It is easier to say Schedule 40 pipe than .180 inch wall thickness. This is the SCH 40 wall thickness for a standard 12" pipe and the actual gauge thickness will vary based on pipe size and material. The larger the Schedule number, the thicker the pipe wall thickness. Pipe Schedule is also expressed in Std., X-Stg., and XX-Stg. since some thicknesses are more common than others.
what is the difference between the PE pipe and HDPE pipe.
schedule is the thickness of the pipe and class is pressure/temperature rating of a fitting or pipe
The main difference is the thickness of the pipe Compare to A Class pipe B Class pipe thickness is more.Like that Compare to B class pipe C Class pipe thickness is more.
Wall thickness (Schedule)
Pipe ERW black pipe class -B And Class-C difference.
pipe schedule is an American definition to define pipe thickness and how much pressure can the pipe stand, schedules are 10,20,40,80.., pipe schedule is nearly close to the eurobian definition for pipe class.
The difference between schedule 40 and 80 pvc is the wall thickness and schedule 80 is thicker then schedule 40 so the higher the schedule number the thicker the wall of the pipe thus can hold more pressure.
Please visit below address. http://www.aquatext.com/tables/pipepres.htm
The schedule value refers to the thickness of the wall of the pipe; the bigger the number (schedule) the bigger the wall thickness is of the pipe. The thickness is relative to the diameter of the tube/pipe an the application it is being used in.
The difference in thickness is not by the ASTM grade, but rather by the term "Schedule" - as in Schedule's 10, 40, and 80 - with schedule 10 having the lighest wall thickness, and schedule 80 having the thickest.
Schedule 80 means "Pipe Wall Thickness as per Sch.80 of ASME B36.10M". Pipe 80 means "3 inch NPS or 80 mm NB pipe as per ASME B36.10M". Hope that it will answer your query adequately. Regards, Bhatta
The gauge of the pipe is the wall thickness. It is easier to say Schedule 40 pipe than .180 inch wall thickness. This is the SCH 40 wall thickness for a standard 12" pipe and the actual gauge thickness will vary based on pipe size and material. The larger the Schedule number, the thicker the pipe wall thickness. Pipe Schedule is also expressed in Std., X-Stg., and XX-Stg. since some thicknesses are more common than others.
If you require higher pressure higher wall thickness of pipe you should use sch 80 pipes.