Gotta get me one of those....




Yeah, if you look closely at that Bosch angle finder you can see that one of the legs is a sort of "U" shape so that it can be collapsed onto the other leg for storage. The problem is that I couldn't get it to sit convincingly against the tube without shifting around, and I wanted to make sure that I was measuring the "flats" beyond the bend area.... you'll notice I finally gave up and grabbed a small scrap of flat stock to use as a backer for that side, and then I was finally able to get both sides fitted up nice and tight for the measurement.
As for your other comment about the degrees....I have no idea what you are telling me there.The demonstration piece travelled a total of 93 degrees around the degree ring indicator, and the actual part on the bench came to 93 degrees also.
I'm still puzzled why there is no apparent "springback" in the bender, but the best I can figure it's because as I approach the value on the degree ring and start feathering the controller to hit the number, the springback of the tube is already being bled-out of the part so the pointer is showing what is truly in the part with no stored energy....
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When I saw your finished angle and you were saying let's see if this is 90 degrees and I am looking and it looked a little open so I figured a little more than 90.
Is the angle finder measuring from the outside of the pipe to outside of pipe or is it measuring from straight line to the finishs point of the pipe?
Because your angles on the bender start at zero when the pipe is straight, and start going up as you bend the pipe, but it looked to me like the measurement you got with the angle finder is the angle between tht 2 ends of the pipe wich is 180 minus your angle.
If that doesn't make sense let me know then I will draw up a pic, but I don't feel like it.![]()


WINNER!
Iceman, none of that would have made any sense to me if I hadn't been out in the shop tonight scratching my head over this thing...
I started all over again with a fresh 3' piece of tube and reset the indicator needle to read at exactly 0* when the tubing was loaded and just slightly loaded by the ram. When I completed the bend and looked at the result, it was clear that I hadn't gotten to a full 90*....then I threw the Bosch on it, and the reading was: 96.8!
It turns out that the issue is exactly as you describe...the Bosch is assuming that 180* is a straight piece of tube, and us "truck guys" assume that a 180* is a hoop. The real value must be calculated as (180 - indicated value). In the case of my fresh bend tonight, the actual bend was 83.2*, not the 96.8* I was reading on the gauge.
More importantly, this also tells me that I actually DO have a springback value.... 6.8 degrees. (The difference between the indicated value on my degree ring, and the actual bend I got)
I'm already working on a simple conversion chart so that I can quickly get "real" bend values from the indicated ones on the Bosch... there is no way I'm going to trust myself to do the math correctly every time, and I'm already getting tired of wasting tube with all of this diagnostic work.
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Keep me informed... if he's able to do it, I'd like to move as quickly as possible.








