When you need to bend tubing and don't have a tube bender, this method works very well.
This is more of a technique than a "tool" and has been around forever.
I threw a quick video together for those who were unaware.
https://youtu.be/EkFv4ozdg9c
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When you need to bend tubing and don't have a tube bender, this method works very well.
This is more of a technique than a "tool" and has been around forever.
I threw a quick video together for those who were unaware.
https://youtu.be/EkFv4ozdg9c
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A vise would help. It'll sure make life a bit easier.
I used to have to use this method when bending 1" sch 40 pipe for hand rails on caterpillar equipment What I would do was weld a cap on one end then fill and pack blast media inside then weld a cap on the other end. The problem then was the hand rails had to be formed to an odd radius size to match those of the factory bends finding something with the correct curve to bend the pipe around was sometimes challenging without a lathe. Then the only way to bend the pipe was to heat it, if you took yo9ur time you could very nearly perfectly match a factory mandrel bent railing.
Just goes to show that this simple technique can be applied to many types of pipe/tubing.
Done that with Wood's metal for years, melts at 158 degrees F, makes tubing bend like a solid metal bar. Used the same alloy for lathe turning thin tubing, fixturing parts you can't clamp, and drilling tubing to eliminate breakthrough burrs.