Industrial Equipment for Your Hospital

Optimal Features On The Best Plastic Pipe Hangers: What To Look For

Plastic pipe hangers help you suspend pipes from ceilings and walls. In an industrial space, this is key for maximizing the space you have available to you for factory pipes and equipment. If you need to send any more pipes up a wall or overhead, you need to examine the optimal features on the best plastic pipe hangers in the market. 

They Are Made of Thermoplastic

Thermoplastic is a type of plastic that is completely resistant to heat. In some cases, the plastic is also resistant to mildly caustic substances, which helps the hangers hold onto pipes that carry caustic materials around the plant, but the pipes have sprung a leak. Look for high heat and caustic ratings on the hangers — if you see them, then you know you have a good quality product. 

They Lock and Release

The best hangers will have locking and releasing mechanisms. Once mounted to the wall or ceiling with a single concrete screw/bolt, the hangers grasp the pipes, and then latches come over the tops of the pipes and lock on the other side. The locks stay put until you release them by hand. Some of the better models also have the ability to double-lock with a hole for a padlock after the hanger's locking mechanism has been locked. This model of pipe hanger is especially helpful if you are dealing with particularly large and very bulky pipes.

The Same Models Come in Multiple Sizes for Various Pipe Diameters

Pipe hangers that cannot fit much larger or much smaller pipes are not worth the money spent. When you really like a pipe hanger line by a specific company, you want to get their hangers in all sizes to fit all the pipes in your plant. From the half-inch diameter electrical wiring pipe to the four-inch diameter fluid pipe, you want pipe hangers to fit both and all the pipe sizes in between. 

They Are Easy to Mount to Concrete or Steel

If the hangers are too complicated to mount to walls and industrial factory ceilings, who wants them? You want the kind that has a single, central spot where you can drive a galvanized concrete screw or steel bolt through the hanger to the concrete or steel behind or above it. This single-hole model means you can also move these hangers to other locations if and when they are no longer useful in the positions they are originally installed. 


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