nanobot29
Mechanical
- Apr 5, 2011
- 53
Good afternoon,
I'm having some trouble understanding how parts will behave when submerged under 3,000 psi of water pressure. One case in particular - if there's a annular disk and hub assembly (both steel) with an interference fit of 2,000 psi. so my question is: even though the interference fit pressure is less than the water pressure, will water seep through and into the interference surface? my first thought was this this is hydrostatic condition therefore there wouldn't be any deformation that would allow water to seep through. am i thinking about this the wrong way? is there any scenario that would cause water to seep through?
thanks and regards,
I'm having some trouble understanding how parts will behave when submerged under 3,000 psi of water pressure. One case in particular - if there's a annular disk and hub assembly (both steel) with an interference fit of 2,000 psi. so my question is: even though the interference fit pressure is less than the water pressure, will water seep through and into the interference surface? my first thought was this this is hydrostatic condition therefore there wouldn't be any deformation that would allow water to seep through. am i thinking about this the wrong way? is there any scenario that would cause water to seep through?
thanks and regards,