Hi,
Assuming the drawing is scaled and true, it is a bit odd to install lip seal (pos 24) as the first barrier. The size, the pressure and lip seal is not placed within some sort of groove. Yet, it has been proven to work from new until today (when you attempt refurbishment) up to 20 bars.
Also cmiiw, when you tighten bolt pos 22, it does not really increase the seating stress of graphite pos 23. It seems like all the seals are subject to seal by means of pressure energized
Just thinking out loud over the possible root causes:
improper installation - as lip seal is very sensitive, a not so good workmanship might have damage the seal.
concentricity issue between the bonnet and the body.
some scratches on the sealing area.
Insufficient seating stress applied.
Is it possible to change the lip seal to another seal such as spiral wound gasket or kamprofile?? I see there is some some space in front of the lip seal
Suggest to again dismantle the bonnet and check the lip seal:
- Were the previous the leakage occurs on the same bolts?
- Dismantle bonnet, check the compression or sealing / contact area between the lip seal vs bonnet and/or body. And also the graphite. If you see its not "really deformed or sealing" on the leakage area, you might need to check that particular area condition such as dimension, scratches, area.
But if most lip seal are not "deformed", would recommend to alter the sealing design or component.
Good luck, it seems to be a very delicate valve.
Regards,
MR
All valves will last for years, except the ones that were poorly manufactured; are still wrongly operated and or were wrongly selected