A pneumatic hose connects your air compressor to the tools and equipment that run on compressed air. In most workshops and factories across Melbourne’s northern industrial corridor – Campbellfield, Broadmeadows, Epping, Thomastown – you’ll find pneumatic hoses running alongside hydraulic lines. Many machines use both systems: hydraulics for heavy lifting, pneumatics for lighter, faster movements and control functions.
Common pneumatic applications include:
The table below shows the key differences between pneumatic and hydraulic hose systems.
| Pneumatic | Hydraulic | |
|---|---|---|
| Power source | Compressed air | Pressurised fluid (oil) |
| Operating pressure | 80–120 PSI | 3,000–5,000 PSI |
| Hose materials | Polyurethane, nylon, PVC | Rubber, braided steel |
| Failure mode | Gradual pressure loss | Sudden burst risk |
| Typical use | Air tools, automation, packaging | Heavy lifting, earthmoving, presses |
Pneumatic hose fittings are the connectors that join your hoses to compressors, tools, and other components. A poor fitting leaks air, and air leaks cost money – your compressor works harder, your tools lose power, and your energy bill goes up. There are three main fitting types used in pneumatic systems.
| Fitting type | How it connects | Best for | Limitations |
|---|---|---|---|
| Push-to-connect | Push tubing in, it locks. Press collar to release. | Factory automation, light industrial, frequent reconfiguration | Needs firmer tubing (nylon, polyurethane). Not ideal for soft rubber hoses. |
| Threaded (BSP/NPT) | Screws into ports on compressors, regulators, valves. | Semi-permanent connections, high-vibration environments | Check thread type before buying. BSP is standard in Australia; imported gear may use NPT. |
| Barbed | Slides into hose. Ridges grip inside wall. Secured with hose clamp. | Permanent setups, low-pressure applications, budget jobs | Hard to disconnect cleanly. Not practical for systems that change often. |
Ace Hoses stocks push-in, threaded, and quick-connect pneumatic fittings. If you’re not sure what you’ve got, bring the old fitting in – or a photo of the connection – and we’ll match it.
Pneumatic hoses don’t fail the way hydraulic hoses do. A hydraulic line under thousands of PSI can burst suddenly. A pneumatic hose at 100 PSI usually degrades gradually. The signs are subtler, which means they’re easy to let run until your tools are underperforming and your compressor is working overtime.
Replace a pneumatic hose if you notice any of the following:
A damaged pneumatic hose should always be replaced, not patched. Taping or clamping a compromised air line is a safety risk. Compressed air at even 100 PSI can cause serious injuries if a weakened hose lets go, including whiplash from a loose hose end striking nearby workers.
Pneumatic hoses are not interchangeable. The right hose depends on your operating pressure, the environment it runs through, and what it connects to. Three factors drive the decision:
Ace Hoses has been supplying and servicing pneumatic and hydraulic systems from Campbellfield for over 46 years. We cut pneumatic hose assemblies to length, fit them to your specifications, and stock the fittings and connectors to match your existing system. If you’re running a mixed hydraulic and pneumatic setup – which most industrial and transport operations do – we handle both from the one workshop.
Call us on (03) 9308 0666, drop into Unit 9/283 Rex Road, Campbellfield, or enquire online. If you can’t get to us, our mobile service covers Melbourne metro and the surrounding area.