yes, although woodie said 14 under and 20 over…i believe the rule book should supersede what woodie said, but if the bar at the kickoff was 14 high, it sure looked like more than 2 inches from top to bottom.
Looking at a blue print in front of me, it is 20" to the top of the upper bar, then you take away 1.25" for the upper pipe, then you have a section with vertical supports down to 16" off the ground which is to the upper portion of the lower bar. The lower bar is also has an OD 1.25" so the total passable height is just less than 14.75"
Doesn’t that look bigger than what it calls out on the drawings? On the drawings it calls out 1.25" OD but that looks slightly bigger to me. Your thoughts?
*Originally posted by Mark G *
**Doesn’t that look bigger than what it calls out on the drawings? On the drawings it calls out 1.25" OD but that looks slightly bigger to me. Your thoughts? **
In the 1 page game discription on the website it consideres this as the “Pipe Rail” if you talk to FIRST. Also I didn’t find anything in the manual about this. So if you find it let us know.
On that picture that Aidan posted it looks like it is 14 1/2 up then 20 over?? It does look like 1.5 OD
*Originally posted by Mark G *
**Doesn’t that look bigger than what it calls out on the drawings? On the drawings it calls out 1.25" OD but that looks slightly bigger to me. Your thoughts? **
Actually the drawing calls out “1 1/4” Schedule 40 aluminum pipe". The 1 1/4" refers to the approximate INTERNAL diameter, Schedule 40 refers to a particular standard the pipe conforms to. The standard deals mostly with the pressure rating of the pipe. But since the pipe is sold with the spec marked on it, it is often specified this way even when pressure is not involved.
The outer diameter in this case should be 1.900 inches. So Woodie’s “just over 14 inches” is correct. Since the top of the lower bar is supposed to be 16" off of the carpet.
PVC pipe is also sold in Schedule 40 but because the mechanical characteristics of the material are different, so are the dimensions. But all diameters of Schedule 40 pipe should handle the same pressure regardless of the material they are made of.
You must not only read, but also understand what you read.
Pipe is usually measured by its inner diameter, where tubing is sold by its outer diameter . . . or something like that, right?
In any case, if it’s still 14.75" to the bottom of the lower pipe at 20" to the top of the upper pipe, I don’t care about the diameter We’re sure about those dimensions, at least? I don’t have field schematics at home, and as far as I can tell, they’re not available online.