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Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure



Hi Alex & Jon,
Thanks, I had looked at figure 11.90 that compares the thicker dome without heel support to the thinner with a glued ring.
I am doing a ring, but in a fiberglass / acrylic (this combination is mentioned in the Stachiw book). I thought this would be stronger
& I could do it myself. I am going to run a couple of layers of fiberglass under the flange to give the heel bond more support.
So I'm partially removing the stress point at the heel & are reinforcing whats left.
The dome is 35mm thick, wich if it were made as a cast dome would have a crush depth of 4000 ft.
However it's being blown to 170 degrees & the apex will be around 1/3 of this thickness; so at the best, not taking into consideration
out of roundness, it would have a 1000 ft crush depth. Depending on how it looks when I get it, I may test it to 500 ft & operate to
250 ft. So the base wich may be close to 35mm thick & could approach a 4000 ft crush depth, will only undergo 1/16th of that pressure
when I'm operating it. What I'm saying is that if the fiberglass heel support ring doesn't work as well as a glued ring, it still won't be the
weekest link.
Someone told me ABS don't like the glued on flange any more.
The mounting methods in figure 11.86 both impede your view. One has a retaining ring running a couple of inches up the dome & the other
has 3 or 4 arms comming half way up the dome.
Regards Alan
 
From: Smyth, Alec
Sent: Friday, February 19, 2010 6:51 AM
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi Alan,
 
It's really good you're looking at Stachiw, which is the bible for viewports. I don't mean to be overly critical, this is probably just interpretation (just like with the real bible, no?) I looked up page 460, and found a rather dire warning that if you're using a flange you need to back it up with a bonded acrylic ring. I agree with your option #1, but I think options #2 and #3 really have to be combined. Call it option 2.5, which consists of machining down the flange AND backing it up with a bonded ring. 
 
For those without the book, the dire warning is: "In an actual application of free-blown hemispheres with flanges, it was found that when the heel backup ring was eliminated the magnitude of tensile and compressive meridional stresses increased 1000 and 64 percent, respectively, although in an attempt to compensate for the expected increase in stress level the thickness of the wall was doubled. (Figure 11.90)."  Figure 11.90 then shows two ways to use a flange, labeled "proper" and "improper". The proper one does indeed have a thinner flange, but crucially it also has a bonded acrylic support ring inside that flange.
 
My recommendation would be to do just that, rather than assume the dome can be backed up with fiberglass instead of bonded acrylic. Or else just take the proven K250 approach. On the K250 the flange area is machined off entirely, in other words Kittredge went with option #1. But for hold-down convenience he added a bonded acrylic ring on the outer surface of the dome. The external ring is over and above the structural requirements, it's just to give you a handy hold-down on a dome that's already strong enough without it.  
 
thanks,

Alec  
  


From: owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Alan James
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 10:37 PM
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi Alec,
Thanks for your concern. I'm open to any cross-examination of what I'm doing.
The idea of partially elliminating the flange comes from Stachiw's book page 460, as one
of the solutions to the problem of bending stresses at the heel. Apparently there are 3
options. !/ removing the flange. 2/ glueing a supporting ring to the heel or 3/ partially
removing the heel so that the heel curvature & hence stresses are lessened.
I'm intending to partially remove the flange to the point where I still have sufficient flange to
retain the dome & also support the heel curvature with  fiberglass & acrylic glue rather than a glued on ring.
If I retain the flange its the easiest way to enable me to hold the dome down. I didn't like other ways that
impede your vision.
The guy blowing the dome has the Stachiw book & we discussed annealing when I put my order in.
I want to clamp my dome to a thick steel plate & test it separate from the sub first.
Would be sad if it failed, I'd probably say something like "BUM" as the rope that suspended it suddenly got
heavier.
Alan
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2010 2:56 PM
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi Alan,
 
Uh-oh, problem. Although it sounds entirely reasonable, that isn't a safe hold-down method. It's essential the flange should be machined entirely off because it's the area of maximum stress in a blown dome. You could only really use the proposed method in an ambient boat. I'll let Greg weigh in as the resident expert, but if he misses this post please be sure to contact him proactively. This is a serious safety issue, not a detail.
 
I'm no acrylic expert, but be aware there are other details that set a submersible dome quite apart from what your local supplier may be used to fabricating. Like the annealing protocol, for instance, which as I understand it can have drastic consequences. Viewports are an area in which something may look OK but not be OK.
 
 
thanks,

Alec


From: owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Alan James
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 4:57 PM
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Thanks Carsten & Alec, thats great information.
I'll add a pressure equalizing valve. If I had a manually operated valve it may
cause problems If I forgot to open it.
I'm not building a K250, the dome on order is being blown 550mm O/D & from 35mm
thick acrylic. I've asked them to trim the flange to 15mm wide & 15mm thick & will have
a retaining ring holding it down.
I was concerned that maybe I'd gone a bit thin to support the upward lifting force of the
dome but it calculates out to  about 1 pound for every inch of flange just at below the surface.
Thats providing as Carsten said, the barametric pressure isn't higher than outside the sub.
Alan
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2010 9:24 AM
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi Alan,
 
If it's a K-250 you're building, here's your other data point. I just weighed the hatch, and it's 23.5 kg. So it would be 6.5 kg buoyant. 
 
Alec 
 
 


From: owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Alan James
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 2:47 PM
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi thanks people,
I was having trouble understanding this. I just put plastic wrap loosly
over the top of a glass & submerged it. Some of the wrap bulged up
but you could push parts down below the level of the top of the glass.
( This proves you right )
I am going with  a dome hatch, but haven't designed the locking mechanism yet.
The dome will be close to  30kg of boyancy before its mounted.
Alan
 
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Thursday, February 18, 2010 6:51 AM
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

First weigh the hatch in air. Then calculate the displacement of the hatch, which is the weight of the water that would fill an equivalent volume. Subtract the displacement from the weight. If you get a negative number, the hatch will tend to "float" as you describe. I doubt very much that would be the case for any conventional elliptical steel hatch. In the case of an acrylic dome hatch like the K-250, I'd recommend doing the math because I'm less sure of the outcome -- those might be slightly buoyant.
 
Alec


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From: owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-personal_submersibles@psubs.org] On Behalf Of Alan James
Sent: Wednesday, February 17, 2010 11:50 AM
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Hatch pressure

Hi all,
I've brought up this subject before, but are tackling it from a differant angle.
How much pressure is exerted upward on a hatch at the moment where the submarine
just submerges below the water? This is the point of most force before external water
pressure helps close it.
If you took your submarine, filled it with water & hung it upside down, would this be the
same amount of force, or close to it.
In wich case if you have a design like Franks flying saucer that angles up to the hatch,
you'd have a lot more force acting upward on the hatch than a K250 where the lifting force
would be spread more evenly along the hull.
Am I thinking right?
Alan