[PSUBS-MAILIST] Leak, pressure and life support test
JimToddPsub at aol.com
JimToddPsub at aol.com
Mon Sep 2 12:55:09 EDT 2013
Hi Alan,
I'm going to strive for no-leak just from securing the hatch. At the
least I expect that means machining the landing before the tower is welded in
place and again after it's welded in place. Dan and Alec experimented
somewhat with the O-rings to achieve a solution.
Jim
In a message dated 9/2/2013 11:47:02 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
alanlindsayjames at yahoo.com writes:
Jim, Hank,
I was talking to a sub pilot who had had 10,000 hrs diving various
submarines.
He said they all leak for the first few feet, even the $3 million dollar
one he was working
on. Phil said they pull a vacuum on the Deep Workers before they dive to
set the o-rings.
Maybe that avoids initial leaks.
Bet Vance could enlighten us here.
Alan
Sent from my iPad
On 2/09/2013, at 4:57 PM, _JimToddPsub at aol.com_
(mailto:JimToddPsub at aol.com) wrote:
Hi Hank,
See if you agree with my line of thinking: At a hatch depth of 20 feet
you'll have about 9 psi differential on your hatch and your other
penetrations as well. At a hatch depth of 1 foot you have about .445 psi
differential.
For many things, the greater the pressure differential, the greater the
chance of a leak or seepage. However on the hatch in particular (and
possibly on some other things), the greater the pressure forcing the hatch against
the landing, the more tightly it will seal. So the hatch might seal well
at depth, but leak when barely submerged
It seems it would be good to do both a high vacuum and a low vacuum test.
If the hatch seals well at high vacuum, but leaks down at low vacuum, more
work is needed on the latches or the mating surfaces.
S
Best regards,
Jim
In a message dated 9/2/2013 9:21:58 A.M. Central Daylight Time,
_hanker_20032000 at yahoo.ca_ (mailto:hanker_20032000 at yahoo.ca) writes:
Hi James,
I always do a vacuum test before my test dives. I use a compressor as a
vacuum pump and draw out as much air as possible. Then I have a valve on
the hull and a vacuum gauge. I let it sit for 24 hr. If it holds the vacuum
your set.
Hank
From: James Frankland <_jamesf at guernseysubmarine.com_
(mailto:jamesf at guernseysubmarine.com) >
To: _personal_submersibles at psubs.org_
(mailto:personal_submersibles at psubs.org)
Sent: Monday, September 2, 2013 3:45:27 AM
Subject: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Leak, pressure and life support test
Hi All,
I did some tests at the weekend. Very small pics attached as i havent
updated my site yet.
First i tested the battery pods and seals with old inner tubes. Managed
to pump them to about 5psi. Not much but i think it was ok to indicate any
leaks. I couldnt see or hear anything and pressure remained steady.
Then i did the very sophisticated "saucepan test" over the hatch viewport.
I was just a bit suspicious of this one as it has no gasket, the lense
seats directly to the face. No leak, but agreed, not much test pressure
although the saucepan was full despite the spillage out the sides.
Next i did a life support test. I filled and ran the scrubber and then
sat inside for an hour with the hatch sealed. CO2 seemed to level out at
about 5500ppm and i topped up O2 when it got to 19%.
i also dropped half a psi of internal pressure and that seemed to hold, so
i am hoping the boat is tight.
I was going to do a leak test in a local fresh water resovoir, but as im a
bit more confident its not going to leak now and its such a logistical
fuss, im going to go straight in the sea. Next week.
Kind Regards
James
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