How To Do A 45 Rolling Offset

A rolling offset is the length that connects two disjointed pipes. A 45 rolling offset is this length of piping that you need when you use 45-degree connectors, the most common connector type. This length forms the hypotenuse of a triangle whose other sides are the true offset, which is the perpendicular diagonal between the pipes, and a third measurement called the setback. Calculate the rolling offset using the Pythagorean theorem and trigonometry.

Step 1

Measure the pipes' offset, which is the horizontal distance between their center lines. For example, suppose that two pipes have an offset of 14 inches.

Step 2

Square the offset. With this example, square 14, giving 196 square inches.

Step 3

Measure the pipes' rise, which is the vertical distance between their center lines. For example, suppose that the rise is 10 inches.

Step 4

Square the rise. With this example, square 10, giving 100 square inches.

Step 5

Add the two squared values together. 196 plus 100 gives 296 square inches.

Step 6

Find the square root of this sum. The square root of 296 is 17.2 inches.

Step 7

Divide this length by 0.707, which is the cosine of 45. 17.2 divided by 0.707 is 24.33, or 24 1/3 inches. This is the pipes' rolling offset.

Cite This Article

MLA

Menezes, Ryan. "How To Do A 45 Rolling Offset" sciencing.com, https://www.sciencing.com/how-12146062-45-rolling-offset/. 7 August 2017.

APA

Menezes, Ryan. (2017, August 7). How To Do A 45 Rolling Offset. sciencing.com. Retrieved from https://www.sciencing.com/how-12146062-45-rolling-offset/

Chicago

Menezes, Ryan. How To Do A 45 Rolling Offset last modified March 24, 2022. https://www.sciencing.com/how-12146062-45-rolling-offset/

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