Understanding 7/8” O.D in Coil Cutsheet and Its Relation to Control Valve Sizing. A Common HVAC Controls Confusion – Simplified
What Does 7/8” O.D Actually Mean?
O.D = Outside Diameter
When you see 7/8” O.D, it typically refers to: Copper tube outside diameter
Commonly used in:
1. Heating / Cooling coils
2. Small AHU or FCU connections
3. DX or hydronic coil piping
Important:
This is NOT the valve size and It is only the tube size of the coil connection.
Copper Tube Size vs Pipe Size (Critical Difference)
Copper tubing and threaded pipe sizes do not match 1:1.
Copper Tube O.D Approx. Nominal Pipe Size
7/8” O.D 1/2” Nominal Pipe Size
A 7/8” O.D copper tube is typically adapted to a 1/2” NPT (threaded) control valve
This is achieved using:
1. Sweat-to-thread adapters
2. Reducers / transition fittings
So… How Do We Actually Size the Control Valve?
Never size a valve based only on O.D. Valve sizing must be based on:
1. Required Flow (GPM) -
2. Pressure Drop Across Valve - Typically 10–30% of total system DP Ensures good valve authority
Practical Example
1. Coil connection: 7/8” O.D copper
Calculated Cv: 1.2
Manufacturer valve availability:
1/2” valve Cv range: -> Suitable
3/4” valve: -> Oversized
Common Mistakes to Avoid
1. Selecting valve equal to copper O.D
2. Upsizing valve “to be safe”
3. Ignoring Cv and focusing only on pipe size
4. Assuming coil connection size = valve size
These mistakes often lead to:
Poor temperature control or Valve hunting or Noise issues or Low valve authority
Key Takeaway
7/8” O.D defines the coil tube size — NOT the control valve size
1. Control valves are sized by Cv and flow
2. Pipe size is a secondary check
3. Adapters handle the physical connection