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PipingDesign.com is 10 years old this month

Piping Design Central is the web-based gateway to technical information for process piping. Here you will find internet links to piping design and layout information and original articles. CAD resources, process engineering, process equipment and in-line component information that are related to industrial process piping design will also be found here. This is a launch point for those wanting to learn about piping design and for those wishing to explore the latest web resources that help piping design professionals do their jobs.
The Piping Design Central Discussion List may be of interest to you. Browse or search through more than 15,000 messages from the worldwide piping design community over the past eight years. There are currently over 1500 piping design professionals subscribed to this list. You will have to provide information in order for your request to join the group to be approved.

pip·ing, n. 1. pipes collectively; a system or network of pipes.;
Piping is used to convey fluids (anything that can flow: liquids, gases and/or solids) from one location to another. It has been used to do so in one form or another for over two thousand years.
Industrial process piping (and accompanying in-line components) can be manufactured from wood, glass, steel, aluminum, plastic and concrete. The in-line components typically sense and control pressure, flowrate and temperature of the transmitted fluid, and usually are included when one discusses the concept of piping design. Process piping is not what you see under your sink.
"Plumbing" is the form of piping that most non-technical people are familiar with, as it constitutes the form of transportation that is used to provide liquids (water) and gases (natural gas used for heating and cooking, for example) to their homes. Piping also removes waste from the household in the form of drainage.
Piping also has innumerable other industrial applications, which are crucial for moving raw and semi-processed fluids for refining into more useful products. Some of the more exotic materials of construction are titanium, chrome-moly and various other steel alloys. Typical process piping sizes range from 1/2" to 30" in diameter. The engineering discipline of piping design is that which gets the fluid to where you need it, whether it is water, gasoline, hydrogen, fuel oil, or any other flowing medium you can think of.