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P-Clip vs Saddle Clamp: Understanding the Difference

Compare P-clips and saddle clamps — design differences, load capacity, liner protection, vibration performance, and when to specify each.

P-clips and saddle clamps are both used for securing pipes and hoses, and the two terms are sometimes used interchangeably — incorrectly. They are different products with different design characteristics and different optimal applications. This guide clarifies the differences and gives clear criteria for choosing between them.

Design Comparison

PropertyP-ClipSaddle Clamp
ConstructionOne-piece looped metal band with rubber linerTwo-piece: saddle body + back plate or two-bolt base
Fixing boltsSingle bolt through fixing holeTwo bolts, one each side of the saddle
Liner contact270–300° circumferential wrapPrimarily top (saddle) — vertical load focus
Diameter range5–90 mm (our range)Typically 15 mm+, up to large bore industrial
Vibration dampingExcellent — circumferential EPDM wrapGood — primarily vertical plane
Installation timeFast — one boltSlower — two bolts, alignment required
Disassembly for serviceEasy — one boltRequires removing both bolts

Load Capacity and Vibration Performance

P-clips distribute clamping load over 270–300 degrees of the item's circumference via the EPDM liner. This even distribution is good for vibration control — the liner contacts the item in all planes and damps vibration equally in the vertical, horizontal, and axial directions.

Saddle clamps apply clamping force primarily from above, pulling the saddle body down onto the item. This is effective for resisting vertical load (the pipe's weight) but less effective for lateral and axial vibration damping. In high-vibration environments where movement in multiple planes is a concern, P-clips are the superior specification.

Installation Speed

P-clips require a single fastener per clip. In production environments or installations with many fixing points, this is a significant time saving versus the two-bolt assembly required for each saddle clamp. Disassembly for maintenance is also faster with a P-clip — one bolt to remove versus two.

When to Specify P-Clips

  • Pipe and hose diameters up to 90 mm where vibration damping is important
  • Automotive, marine, rail, and vehicle applications — where vibration is a design consideration
  • Installations with multiple fixing points where installation speed matters
  • HVAC copper pipework and building services (standard and common practice)
  • Any application where the item must be electrically isolated from the mounting structure

When Saddle Clamps Are More Appropriate

  • Very large diameter, heavy-wall steel pipe (above 90 mm) in static industrial installations where vertical load capacity is the primary requirement
  • Applications where the pipe must be accessible from the top for inspection without removing the fastener entirely
  • Installations where the design specifically calls for a two-bolt saddle clamp

FAQs

What is the difference between a P-clip and a saddle clamp?
A P-clip is a one-piece looped metal band with a single fixing hole. A saddle clamp is a two-piece design with two bolts that pull a saddle body down against a base plate. Saddle clamps provide higher vertical clamping for large, heavy pipes; P-clips are faster to install and provide better all-plane vibration damping.
Which is better for vibration resistance?
P-clips with EPDM liner generally provide better vibration damping because the rubber liner contacts the item circumferentially, absorbing vibration in all planes. Saddle clamps with rubber inserts provide isolation primarily in the vertical plane.
Can P-clips replace saddle clamps in pipework installations?
For pipe diameters up to 90 mm and in vibration-prone environments, P-clips are often the better choice. For very large diameter, heavy-wall pipe above 90 mm in static installations where load capacity is the primary requirement, saddle clamps may be more appropriate.
Do saddle clamps provide better pipe protection than P-clips?
Both provide rubber-lined protection when correctly specified. P-clips actually provide more even load distribution through circumferential contact — a saddle clamp contacts primarily at the top, relying on vertical clamping force.
Are P-clips faster to install than saddle clamps?
Yes. A P-clip requires one bolt. A saddle clamp requires locating the saddle, aligning two bolts, and tightening both evenly. For installations with multiple fixing points, P-clips are significantly faster to install and remove.

British-Made P-Clips

One-piece, fast to install, with EPDM liner as standard. Full size range in stock.

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