Make your next pipe fittings PO clearer, faster, and less risky

Buying pipe fittings for fire protection, waterworks, irrigation, industrial utility piping, or MRO work sounds straightforward—until a submittal gets rejected, a thread spec doesn’t match, or a flange class gets misinterpreted. This guide breaks down what procurement teams, MRO managers, and project engineers in the United States typically need to specify: dimensions, materials, standards, connection methods, and documentation. It’s written for real-world purchasing: fewer assumptions, more “copy/paste” details for RFQs and purchase orders.
Why “pipe fittings” specs fail in the field Most fit-up and compatibility issues trace back to a few missing details:

  • Mixing up NPS, OD, and “schedule” (especially for large diameters)
  • Calling out “STD” instead of SCH 40 for sizes where they diverge (common on NPS 12 and up)
  • Assuming a flange “Class 150” means 150 psi (it doesn’t)
  • Not stating thread standard, groove standard, gasket material, or coating/lining requirements

1) Dimensions: NPS, schedule, and why it matters

In carbon steel and alloy steel pipe, ASME B36.10M is the commonly referenced dimensional standard defining outside diameter (OD) and wall thickness by NPS and schedule. One key purchasing reality: the OD stays constant for a given NPS, while the wall thickness changes by schedule. (blog.projectmaterials.com)

PO tip For steel pipe and mating fittings, state NPS + schedule (example: “NPS 6, SCH 40”) rather than legacy terms alone. ASME B36.10 notes that above certain sizes, legacy terms like “STD” can differ from “SCH 40,” causing unplanned thinner walls. (blog.projectmaterials.com)

2) Material callouts: don’t stop at “carbon steel”

A clean spec includes pipe standard (if piping is part of the scope), fitting standard, and service intent (temperature, corrosion environment, potable/non-potable, indoor/outdoor).

Common U.S. pipe specs you’ll see tied to fittings

  • ASTM A53: general mechanical/pressure applications; available as seamless or welded (ERW) depending on type
  • ASTM A106: seamless carbon steel pipe often specified for higher-temperature service in process piping

While the details of each project should be engineered, a practical purchasing distinction is that A106 is seamless-only, while A53 can be welded or seamless depending on the type—important for certain service requirements and client specs. (blog.projectmaterials.com)

3) Connection types: threaded, grooved, welded, flanged (and what to specify)

The “right” connection is usually a mix of code requirements, install speed, maintainability, and labor constraints. The main buyer pitfall is not specifying the standard behind the connection.
Connection Where it’s used What to state on the PO Common failure point
Threaded Small-bore utilities, certain maintenance work NPS, thread standard (e.g., NPT), material, coating Thread form not stated; mixing tapered/straight threads
Grooved Fire protection, water distribution, fast retrofit installs Groove standard, end type, gasket material if required Wrong groove dimensions or mismatched coupling series
Butt-weld Process piping, high-integrity systems Material grade, schedule, bevel requirements, NDE expectations (if any) Schedule mismatch; missing bevel/end prep requirements
Flanged Equipment tie-ins, skids, maintainable joints ASME standard, class, facing (RF/FF), gasket/bolting notes “Class” misread as psi; facing mismatch causes leaks
Grooved joint note for waterworks buyers If your scope includes grooved or shouldered joints for water/wastewater services, AWWA C606 is a key reference that sets minimum requirements (materials, dimensions, tolerances, inspection, proof-of-design, markings, and production testing). (store.awwa.org)

4) Flange classes: what “Class 150” actually means

In U.S. industrial supply, many flanges are specified to ASME B16.5 (typical size range NPS 1/2 through 24). The important point: the class number is not the pressure rating. Pressure depends on material group and temperature. (midstreamcalculator.com)

Quick reference (typical carbon steel A105, around ambient)

ASME B16.5 tables commonly show (for a typical carbon steel group) approximate non-shock ratings around 285 psig for Class 150 and 740 psig for Class 300 at about 100°F, with ratings derating as temperature rises. (blog.projectmaterials.com)
PO tip For flanged fittings, include: standard (ASME B16.5), class, facing (RF/FF/RTJ), material, and any bolting/gasket requirements—especially if the end user has a corporate spec.

5) Waterworks & irrigation angle: PVC pressure pipe standards still impact fittings

Many U.S. municipal, civil, and irrigation scopes blend materials and joining methods (PVC pressure pipe, DIP, steel, valves, and transition fittings). For PVC pressure pipe, AWWA C900 is a widely referenced standard covering PVC pressure pipe and fabricated fittings in large size ranges, with pressure classes commonly spanning 80 psi to 305 psi depending on diameter and design. (store.awwa.org)

Buying takeaway When your fittings touch waterworks/irrigation networks, ask early: CIOD vs IPS size basis, pressure class, restraint requirements, and whether the owner requires specific approvals for potable service.

Step-by-step: a “clean” pipe fittings RFQ template (copy/paste)

1) Define the service

State: fire protection / potable water / irrigation / compressed air / process utility, plus operating pressure/temperature range, indoor/outdoor, and corrosion environment.

2) Define the dimensional system

Provide NPS, schedule (steel), or size basis (IPS/CIOD), plus any project standard.

3) Define materials

Example fields: carbon steel / stainless / ductile iron / PVC; include grade and coating/lining if applicable.

4) Define connection type and standard

Threaded (state thread), grooved (state groove standard), butt-weld (state schedule + end prep), flanged (state ASME standard + class + facing).

5) Define compliance + documentation

Ask for mill certs (when needed), heat numbers/traceability, and packing requirements—especially important for export shipments.

U.S. buyer angle: supporting multi-city projects and export-ready orders

Procurement teams supporting projects across Boise, Salt Lake City, Denver, Phoenix, Seattle, and other U.S. hubs often need consistency more than anything: the same fittings, the same end prep, the same documentation, the same packaging rules—shipped to different job sites on different timelines. When you standardize your RFQ language (NPS/schedule, connection standards, flange class/facing, coating/lining), you reduce “equivalent” substitutions that slow submittals and create field surprises.

If your order may ship internationally, add: Incoterms, labeling requirements, country-specific documentation needs, and whether partial shipments are acceptable.

Need help matching pipe fittings to your spec, schedule, and logistics plan?

IFW Supply supports contractors, distributors, and end users with fire protection, waterworks & irrigation, industrial, and safety product sourcing—plus export-ready documentation and shipping coordination when required.

Related IFW Supply pages

  • Fire Protection Equipment (hose, nozzles, valves, special hazards, pumps, custom solutions)
  • Waterworks & Irrigation (flow testing, hydrant accessories, couplings, valves, pump accessories)
  • Industrial Products (PVF, instrumentation, hangers/strut/fasteners, industrial materials)
  • Export Sales (cross-referencing, documentation, packing/crating, inspections, warehousing, shipping options)
  • Safety (PPE, detection, eyewash/showers, traffic safety, hazardous location signals/controls)

FAQ: Pipe fittings purchasing and specification

What’s the most important information to include when ordering pipe fittings?

At minimum: size (NPS or diameter basis), schedule/class (where applicable), material grade, connection type (threaded/grooved/welded/flanged), and the governing standard (e.g., ASME B16.5 for flanges, AWWA C606 for certain grooved/shouldered waterworks joints). (store.awwa.org)
Does “Class 150” mean 150 psi?

No. In ASME B16.5, the class is a designation; allowable pressure depends on temperature and material group. For common carbon steel examples near ambient temperature, Class 150 is often around 285 psig and Class 300 around 740 psig, but you must verify for your material and temperature. (blog.projectmaterials.com)
Why do buyers specify schedule numbers instead of “STD”?

Because schedule is explicit. ASME B36.10 notes that for some larger sizes, legacy terms like “STD” can differ from “SCH 40,” and that mismatch can lead to thinner wall than intended. (blog.projectmaterials.com)
How do grooved joint standards affect compatibility?

Grooved systems rely on precise groove geometry, tolerances, and validated performance. AWWA C606 establishes minimum requirements for grooved and shouldered joints (including inspection and proof-of-design procedures) for water and related services. (store.awwa.org)
For waterworks/irrigation, what’s one quick spec check that prevents ordering mistakes?

Confirm the size system (IPS vs CIOD), pressure class, and whether the owner is calling out an AWWA standard such as C900 for PVC pressure pipe and fabricated fittings (common pressure classes range roughly 80–305 psi depending on configuration). (store.awwa.org)

Glossary (quick definitions)

NPS: Nominal Pipe Size; a naming system used for pipe sizing (not the same as actual OD).
Schedule (SCH): Wall thickness designations for pipe; OD stays constant for an NPS while wall thickness changes by schedule (ASME B36.10M). (blog.projectmaterials.com)
ASME B36.10M: Dimensional standard for welded and seamless wrought steel pipe (OD and wall thickness by NPS/schedule). (blog.projectmaterials.com)
ASME B16.5: Standard covering many common pipe flange dimensions and pressure–temperature rating tables (pressure depends on material and temperature). (blog.projectmaterials.com)
AWWA C606: Standard providing minimum requirements for grooved and shouldered joints used in water and related services. (store.awwa.org)
AWWA C900: Standard covering PVC pressure pipe and fabricated fittings across large diameter ranges; commonly referenced in waterworks projects. (store.awwa.org)

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