joestue wrote:The PVC1120 means it is PVC type I grade 1. Hydraulic design stress of 2000 psi, or a safety factor of 2.5, industry standard. burst is 5600 psi.
the only other PVC i've seen is 2116 Type II grade 1, design stress of 1000 PSI.
DHW also means it is good to 140 Fahrenheit at some specific derating, i lost that pdf...trying to find it again
I don't believe those pressure ratings for PVC1120 are correct. I believe PVC1120 is the type of PVC pastic. The pressure rating of a particular pipe or fitting has to take into account the diameter of the pipe, characteristics of fittings, wall thickness etc.joestue wrote:absolutely, if the manufacturer don't want to guarantee a product but is sill kind enough the give the material properties of the product, feel free to use them
You would be crazy to take a generic, pressure rated, piece of SCH 40 PVC up to 2000 PSI even if it does say PVC1120 on it. Why do you think the marked pressure rating is only 1/10th what you say PVC1120 is good for? That would be a 25X safety margin.
Here are some pressure ratings for various SDR pressure rated PVC1120 pipes. Notice that for the different SDR ratings the maximum pressure rating for the 2" pipe is different since the wall thicknesses are different, even though they are all PVC1120.
You can't say that the pressure rating of PVC1120 is XXX PSIG since you have not specified the wall thickness, pipe diameter etc.
You're going to get somebody killed telling them it's OK to take PVC1120 to 2000 PSI.
BTW, the derating for the pressure at 140F is a factor of 0.22, roughly 1/5th the pressure rating at 73F. The 200~300 PSI pressure rating for most pressure rated PVC pipe (PVC1120) may well be the pressure rating at ~140F. Regardless, it would be folly to expect pressure rated SCH40 PVC1120 to survive 2000 PSI.