The only sheet material I know that has any recovery under your conditions is Blue African Asbestosis. I personally wouldn't use sheet gasket unless it was asbestos under your stated operating conditions unless I absolutely, positively was forced to.
I agree if that graphite wouldn't be the material of choice if the process stream is oxidizing.
Thought I would add this since they may not like graphite on the fasteners.
Thermoplate 220 in aerosol can or as grease in a jar from the
Chemola division. This is a very good antiseize that has excellant weathering properties.
The only sheet material I know that has any recovery under your conditions is Blue African Asbestosis. I personally wouldn't use sheet gasket unless it was asbestos under your stated operating conditions unless I absolutely, positively was forced to.
desertfox,
Agree with you 100% as you know it's getting there that is the problem.
Anecdotal:
WE manufacturer a white polymer either in a continuous or batch polymerization equipment that has had gasket problems since the removal of Asbestosis. There was many dollars and time thrown at this problem by various groups who positively had the right answer. Our group was saying all along that that if the flange cloud support a spiral wound graphite the majority of our problems would be over. There was and uproar every time graphite was mentioned as a filler you would think we stole the outhouse. This rocks along for several several years where the only positive thing that came out of all the meetings was we got flange facers, Biach Tensioner, and Hydraulic Ratchet wrenches and a thousands of gasket samples.
I very seldom went to the yarn analytical lab but happened by chance to around a conversation about black specks the arch villain in the proposed use of graphite. The lab was seeing a certain number of black specks which they consider normal. there wasn't much duplicating there results as the number varied all of the map. I ask could they see 5 additional black specks and the answer is probably no. I went to a new Polymer Engineer to discuss the possibility of black specks if the gasket failed. In a 2500 pound batch of polymer we would see only 5 or 6 black specks if the gasket under went a catastrophic failure and all the graphite was dumped in at one is the stirred autoclave.us. When we did actually test a graphite filled gasket on an autoclave the lab reported that black specks were non discernible. One for the good guys.