ErnestB88
Mechanical
- Aug 11, 2010
- 1
Greetings all,
This will seem somewhat trivial to some but this is my first attempt at designing a sealed enclosure and it seems so simple yet very easy to make mistakes.
I am designing a sealed, extruded aluminum enclosure. The ends will be sealed with metal end plates which will clamp down on a gasket (Gaskets will be Nitrile/Buna-N). The extrusion profile is square and the gaskets/endcaps will be square to match then bolted in place at the four corners. It also has to be UL approved if that makes a difference.
My dilemma is in whether or not to use foam or rubber gasket material. The ends of the extrusion may not be cut perfectly so I was thinking a foam would be more apt to conforming to the imperfect surface but a more typical rubber seal seems like it would be more robust.
Can anyone explain the difference/advantages/disadvantages to foam versus hard rubber gaskets? As I said, this is somewhat new territory for me.
This will seem somewhat trivial to some but this is my first attempt at designing a sealed enclosure and it seems so simple yet very easy to make mistakes.
I am designing a sealed, extruded aluminum enclosure. The ends will be sealed with metal end plates which will clamp down on a gasket (Gaskets will be Nitrile/Buna-N). The extrusion profile is square and the gaskets/endcaps will be square to match then bolted in place at the four corners. It also has to be UL approved if that makes a difference.
My dilemma is in whether or not to use foam or rubber gasket material. The ends of the extrusion may not be cut perfectly so I was thinking a foam would be more apt to conforming to the imperfect surface but a more typical rubber seal seems like it would be more robust.
Can anyone explain the difference/advantages/disadvantages to foam versus hard rubber gaskets? As I said, this is somewhat new territory for me.