United States, Canada, and Brazil Common wall-thicknesses of copper tubing in the U.S., Canada and India are "Type K", "Type L", "Type M", and "Type DWV": • Type K has the thickest wall section of the three types of pressure rated tubing and is commonly used for deep underground burial, such as under sidewalks and streets, with a suitable corrosion protection coating or continuous polyethylene sleeve as required by the plumbing code. In the United States, it usually has green-colored printing. This pipe designation is used in the Refrigeration Industry. • Type L has a thinner pipe wall section and is used in residential and commercial water supply and pressure applications. In the United States, it usually has blue-colored printing. • Type M has an even thinner pipe wall section and is used in residential and commercial low-pressure heating applications. In the United States, it usually has red-colored printing. • Type DWV has the thinnest wall section and is generally only suitable for unpressurized applications, such as drain, waste, and vent (DWV) lines. In the United States, it usually has yellow or light orange colored printing, common sizes being , , and 2-inch copper tube size. Types K and L are generally available in both hard drawn straight sections and in rolls of soft annealed tubing, whereas type M and DWV are usually only available in hard drawn straight sections. Note: Types "L" and "M" are often mistakenly identified as purposed for "hot" or "cold" applications by novice home repairers by their red and blue printing. This is an incorrect assumption. The printing only references the gauge thickness of the pipe, which may affect application choice and address quality/durability concerns for the product selected. In the North American plumbing industry, the size of copper tubing is designated by its nominal diameter, which is th inch less than the outside diameter. The inside diameter varies according to the thickness of the pipe wall, which differs according to pipe size, material, and grade: the inside diameter is equal to the outside diameter, less twice the wall thickness. The North American refrigeration industry uses copper pipe designated
ACR (air conditioning and refrigeration field services) pipe and tubing, which is sized directly by its outside diameter (OD) and a typed letter indicating wall thickness. Therefore, one-inch nominal type L copper tube and th inch type D ACR tube are exactly the same size, with different size designations. ACR pipe and tubing is cleaned after manufacturing and then capped and sealed, to ensure that the tubing is free from grains of metal and processing residues that could degrade components of a refrigerant system, the circulating refrigerant itself, or the compressor oil. Type ACR tubing may be high purity copper without any trace residue of de-oxygenating material, low trace phosphate residue, or high trace phosphate residue, while tubing made to carry water is either level of trace phosphate deoxygenating residue. Except for those differences between ACR (types A and D) and plumbing (types K, L, M, and DWV) pipes, the type only indicates wall thickness and does not affect the outside diameter of the tube. Type K inch, type L inch, and type D inch ACR all have the same outside diameter of inch. In both the U.S. and Canada, copper pipe and fittings are sold in
imperial units only as metric sizes are not manufactured for use in North America. Other sizes include 18 mm, 28 mm, 35 mm, 42 mm, 54 mm, 66.7 mm, 76.1 mm, and 108 mm outside diameters. Tubing in 8 mm and 10 mm outside diameters is called a "micro bore" and is easier to install, although there is a slightly increased risk of blockage from scale or debris. It is sometimes used for central heating systems, and 15 mm adapters are used to connect it to radiator valves.
Australia In Australia, copper tubing classifications are "Type A", "Type B", "Type C", and "Type D": Copper pipes in Australia are referenced to their DN (diamètre nominal) number, which is a nominal millimeter equivalent to their actual Imperial size. For example, DN20 is the size for copper pipe with an outside diameter of 19.05 mm or inch. While pipe sizes in Australia are inch-based, they are classified by outside rather than inside diameter (e.g., a nominal inch copper pipe in Australia has measured diameters of 0.750 inches outside and 0.638 inches inside, whereas a nominal inch copper pipe in the U.S. and Canada has measured diameters of 0.875 inch outside and 0.745 inch inside.
New Zealand New Zealand has the same plumbing code as Australia, and both use inch-based tubes denominated in millimeters. However, New Zealand's sizes are based on the "nominal bore" rather than "nominal diameter" (e.g., NZ size 20 measures 0.750 inches inside diameter, as opposed to Australian DN20 which measures 0.750 inches
outside diameter). Effectively, New Zealand pipes measure the same as U.S. and Canadian ones. ==Lead leaching==