Hi Brent. The groove for an "O" ring is quite a bit wider than the "O" ring
itself, leaving a space inside the groove for water to get into. The
"taper" in the groove is on the inside face and it's only a tiny bit, under 5
degrees out of plumb. The bottom corners of the groove are supposed to be
rounded slightly. The Parker "O" ring "design book" explains the function and
has charts for sizes and many different types of applications depending on what
the "O" ring is trying to accomplish. There's quite a few different types of
groove shapes with some designs based on a rotating shaft, sliding shaft, and a
bunch of other applications. The common function of all of them is to apply
pressure against the rubber and force it into a TINY crack.
The "O" ring gets pushed up against the inside groove wall as the
water pressure is applied. The "O" ring doesn't really deform into a slightly
rectangular shape until the pressure builds up enough to squash the hatch down.
The groove needs to be wide enough to accommodate the "squared" "O" ring
and still leave enough space for the water to get in there so the water is
applying pressure to the "O" ring, forcing it up against the crack between the
two metal surfaces. It's a real simple design and can withstand a LOT of
pressure.
Your rendering shows the taper on the outside groove wall and the rubber
"O" ring is filling the groove. That won't seal because there's no where for the
water to get in there so it's actually acting like a flat gasket.
The water would slip under the squared "O" ring because the pressure is
being applied to the gap and not "behind" the "O" ring.
Frank D.
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