Designed for pneumatic tubing connections in tight or angled routing situations, the Numatics 1/4 x 10-32 Swivel Elbow provides a flexible, rotatable fitting solution commonly used in pneumatic cylinder and valve assemblies. The swivel design allows the elbow to be repositioned after installation, reducing stress on tubing and simplifying line routing in confined spaces.
Manufactured under the Numatics brand, now part of the Asco LP Cylinder product line, this fitting combines a 1/4-inch tube port with a 10-32 threaded connection, making it well suited for compact pneumatic circuits where standard fixed elbows would limit adjustability.
SKU: INB109-104-036
Supplier Part Number (MPN): INB109-104-036
Alternate Part Numbers: MI-04215821, MINO-00609X00422
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Specifications
Alternate Part Numbers
Alternate Part NumberMI-04215821, Alternate Part Number MINO-00609X00422
Brand
Numatics - C/O Asco Lp
Brand
Asco Lp Cylinder
Pack Size
1.00
UOM
EA
Supplier Part Number
INB109-104-036
Product Weight
1.00 lbs
Product Questions & Answers (2)
Question by: Merle B on Oct 28, 2025, 9:48 AM
got a tight little air line run on a cylinder, is this elbow one you can swivel after you thread it in?
Answer by: Customer Support on Oct 29, 2025, 9:31 PM
After you install it, the swivel elbow can be rotated to point the tube where you need it. That makes it handy for tight or angled routing and helps keep the tubing from getting twisted up or stressed.
Question by: Hubert C on Dec 20, 2025, 11:01 AM
Got a cylinder assembly with some real tight clearance around the port area. Will a swivel elbow let me reposition the tubing line after everything's already bolted down?
Answer by: Customer Support on Dec 22, 2025, 6:16 AM
Once the fitting is threaded in, the swivel feature lets you rotate the elbow body to point the tubing in whatever direction clears your hardware. That's exactly what it's built for. Fixed elbows lock your routing angle the moment you torque them down, which gets frustrating fast in tight quarters. With this one, you can get the assembly snugged up first and then swing the elbow around to meet your tubing run. It takes a good bit of the headache out of working in confined spaces on cylinder and valve setups.