Slip & Drive (aka S and Drive Duct) Installation for HVAC Ductwork
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- Опубліковано 22 лис 2020
- Slip & Drive Duct- The most common transverse (end to end) connection for commercial HVAC Duct. The Drive Cleat is secured to the 360 degree flanged section on left (formed by a Cleatbender or Drive Turn machine). The Flat S Lock is hammered onto the section on right. For most low and medium pressure jobs, Duct Slip and Drive connections meet SMACNA standards.
Slip and Drive Duct is the most common type of rectangular ductwork. Even the largest Duct fab shops will tell you that Slip and Drive duct accounts for a greater percentage than the TDC/F and Ductmate flanged duct they produce.
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Straight and to the point. Awesome vid. Thank you!
Perfect video. Thank you.
Love your video bro...thanks!!
Great video -- thanks!
Also vote A for Awesome! Thank you sir
Nicely done
Excellent thanks
I love it😍
Smw 🔥
Nice tote. 👍👍
Appreciate it . Very helpful.
The company I work at, we call them S cleats. Like you, we simply call the department S and Drives!
Thanks
thanks u
What happened if use d cleat on 4 sides instead of two
Kaha se ho
Can you use that to make round duct instead of buying the expensive premade slip lock
Unfrotunately no it’s only for rectangular and square duct
God it’s it looks so easy putting them in but once Sheetrock is in its the biggest pain in the ass taking those damn cleats out!!!
yeah so this with a 38x18 😂it wont be ao easy but i get the point nice video
Works on 8x6 though
Looks good! I'd suggest gloves, though. 😃
You mean bitch mittens no thank you
@@austinm3294 LOL! This really made me laugh. Please tell me you have a better name for safety glasses.
Must respect the metal.
@@The_rat2 you don't need gloves if you know how to handle metal.
How much Price one hour for duct installation working
As pati or silp
No save button
Good
big tools
S & D hasn't been used for decades here in the UK, No one I know liked working with it, it looks nice and easy on a bench but getting it to stay straight and not twist was a nightmare while fitting a 1200mm long length of duct on-site, usually off of a pair of steps, with just a 200mm gap from the slab to try and get the corners in (No self-respecting trunker would bend the corners over with a hammer). It also leaked like a sieve when tested.
Stupid idea that didn't last, was ok for a bit of 200 square toilet extract but useless when used as a supply run.
Trunker, 23 years experience.
Interesting here in SoCal it’s common but on widths lower than 24”. We seal/pookie it heavy but tdc is the easiest In my experience takes a little longer making the frame but wort it
Your first problem is thinking and talking in mm and cm. Ductwork is INCHES and that alone jinxed you so badly it would have never fit properly
pre cut drives 1/2 inches bigger than duct bend 1 inch with tongues open other end with screw driver and bang on then bang top over
Didn’t stagger the seams.
He’s a shop guy he don’t know 😂
Not make or break
dauc taig
Sir muje mere Ghar par lagwana h plzz contect numbar de
C poti
joined to achcha lekin mazbuti Nahi hai NAT bolt wala achcha rehta hai may bhi yehi kaam karta hun
🤣🤣
f it perpendicular hammering
That’s what the flat side is for lol it’s great
Its not good job