by Tony » Wed May 20, 2009 12:20 am
One source of very small bore tubing is the refrigeration industry. Many types of refrigerators do not use a proper refrigerant expansion valve, but a length of fairly fine capillary tube.
All domestic air conditioners, refrigerators, and freezers use a length of copper capillary tube, and a fairly wide range of sizes are available.
You may even be able to salvage something from a dead refrigerator.
Google turned up this, just to give an example of the type of stuff I am raving on about:
Copper capillary tubes
Outside Diameter: 1.83 mm - 6.10 mm
Inside Diameter: 0.66 mm - 4.45 mm
Average Walthickness: 0.584 mm - 0.862 mm
Area of Cross Section: 0.343 mm - 15.5 mm
The thin stuff will be pretty flexible, (just like a hollow copper wire), but I would expect it will work harden fairly quickly. It would be fairly easy to work with, but would certainly not look as nice as stainless.
So it may be ideal for a quick do it yourself garage experiment, but it would be a bit lacking for a saleable presentable commercial product.
Also known as the infamous "Warpspeed" on some other Forums.