cbrock
Mechanical
- Feb 21, 2002
- 5
I have a question regarding machining tolerances on o-ring glands.
When designing a plug style o-ring gland, the Parker O-Ring Handbook (as well as other o-ring manufacturers) base their static seal dimension tables for a pressure of 1500 psi & a 70 durometer o-ring.
The design charts give the nominal bore diameter (tolerance +.002"/-0.000") and the plug diameter (+0.0001"/-0.001"). Using the chart dimensions, you will get a diametral clearance of 0.002" to 0.005".
In my application, this is percisely what I am looking for. However, when the drawings are sent to our machine shop, the machinists keep complaining that we are specifying unreasonable tolerances, especially on the plug diameter.
I am not a machinist and can understand that a diameter tolerance of +0/-0.001" can be quite tight. Are the tolerances recommended by Parker unreasonable? I would imagine that an industry leader such as Parker would not recommend tolerances that no machinist could hit.
I do understand that the tolerances can be relaxed, giving larger diameteral clearances and compensating by using a harder o-ring and using the limits of extrusion charts for clearance. I would like to avoid this if possible.
Any advice would be appreciated.
When designing a plug style o-ring gland, the Parker O-Ring Handbook (as well as other o-ring manufacturers) base their static seal dimension tables for a pressure of 1500 psi & a 70 durometer o-ring.
The design charts give the nominal bore diameter (tolerance +.002"/-0.000") and the plug diameter (+0.0001"/-0.001"). Using the chart dimensions, you will get a diametral clearance of 0.002" to 0.005".
In my application, this is percisely what I am looking for. However, when the drawings are sent to our machine shop, the machinists keep complaining that we are specifying unreasonable tolerances, especially on the plug diameter.
I am not a machinist and can understand that a diameter tolerance of +0/-0.001" can be quite tight. Are the tolerances recommended by Parker unreasonable? I would imagine that an industry leader such as Parker would not recommend tolerances that no machinist could hit.
I do understand that the tolerances can be relaxed, giving larger diameteral clearances and compensating by using a harder o-ring and using the limits of extrusion charts for clearance. I would like to avoid this if possible.
Any advice would be appreciated.