Greg, Alan
How we did it:
-no pre annealing
-slow heating to 160-165 Deg.C
-slow pressing
-slow cooling to 100-110 Deg. C and remove the male form.
Silicone grease gives good results against sticking and surface
damage.
-slow cooling to room temp..
The press tool is intergrated with the oven so there is no thermo
shock for moving the dome in and outside.
Just turn of the power and it cools down in 24
H.
-trim flange of
-24 hour annealing at 80 deg. C.
-machining edge
The press tool is intergrated with the oven so there is no
thermo shock for moving the dome in and outside.
Just turn of the power and it cools down in 24 H.
of course unmanned pressure testing.
Not agree that forming is the easiest part. What doe you do against
the unequal sliding in of the flange??
The black magic book of acrylics...
Emile
Hi
Alan,
I?m not familiar with
Emile?s methods so I can?t comment on what he does, but plug & ring forming
requires removing the male plug from the part before the part is completely cool
(usually at about 180 F) otherwise the part will try to shrink around the plug
and greatly increase the internal
stress (sometimes even cracking the part). Cast hemispheres are also done this
way- the male/female mold assembly is removed from the autoclave and the male is
pulled out while the acrylic is still hot and hasn?t had a chance to shrink
around the plug. Then, the acrylic hemisphere and female mold are rolled back
into the autoclave to completely harden and shrink.. This shrinkage occurs
regardless of how slowly the mold/ part assembly is allowed to
cool.
Forming domes for PVHO
is not a quick process- it?s more like ?massaging? the sheet into the shape it
needs to be. Careful heating and cooling is the key to a bullet-proof acrylic
bubble.
Greg
From: owner-
personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner- personal_submersibles@psubs.org ]
On Behalf Of Alan
James
Sent: Monday, June 18,
2012 3:51 PM
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] acrylic dome
fabrication
In
Emiles case where he is pressing the
acrylic with a male mold inside an oven,
could
all the annealing processes (apart from post glue process) be rolled in to
one?
IE, cut your circle, clamp in place, do
the polymer release & high temp stress
relieving cycle, then press at the correct
temperature followed by forming stress
relief while the mold is still in
place.?
From: Greg
<greg@precisionplastics.com>
To: personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Sent: Tuesday, 19 June 2012
2:42 AM
Subject: RE:
[PSUBS-MAILIST] acrylic dome
fabrication
With regard to acrylic
dome fabrication, there are two very important areas to address. One is
obviously the mechanical design such as shape, thickness, how it is sealed,
making sure that movement under compression is considered,
etc.
But equally important
when thermoforming acrylic sheet is how it is
heated and cooled (and the number of times it is heated). For greatest ultimate
strength, acrylic should be subjected to a number of heat cycles. The first
cycle is to more completely polymerize the sheet than the casting
process allows. This is a long process that also causes the sheet to release,
over time, any residual monomer left in the material. The next cycle is a higher
temperature stress relieving cycle, that releases casting stresses and pre
shrinks the material to reduce forming stresses later. Then comes the actual
forming cycle (the easy part!). After forming, a stress relieving cycle is
performed to remove internal stress from forming before any machining or gluing
(to prevent crazing). Another annealing cycle will be needed to polymerize the glue joints (if there are
any) and also to remove stress from any machine operations that were performed.
A thick part may stay in the oven for a week to fully relieve stress. Also, even
though there are published tables for annealing acrylic, these are minimum times required. Air flow across
the surface of the sheet is also finely controlled during these processes. After
fabrication is complete, only very fine wet sanding or hand rubbing is
allowed.
George Kittrege
was relayed a story to me about a 1? thick acrylic dome (not annealed) that
imploded at only 50 ft and another, identical dome (properly annealed) that went
to 823 ft! A 16 fold increase in strength! Both domes looked exactly the same
but were very different from a strength perspective. I know it was true because
he showed me the test report.
From: owner-
personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-
personal_submersibles@psubs.org ] On Behalf
Of Smyth, Alec
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2012 5:00
PM
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs..org
Subject: RE: [PSUBS-MAILIST]
how to fit the acrylic dome
I?m not an
expert on domes, but I agree with David that the O-ring groove is in a dangerous
spot.. You could, for instance, chamfer the outside edge and put the
O-ring there (see photo on the Snoopy project page). In addition, careful with
the drawing on the left and stress concentration at the flange. Domes are made
with a flange like that, but it should be machined off because during
fabrication it will have accumulated stress. When a shoulder is used, as in the
K250 domes, it is a bonded shoulder.
Viewports are an
area where one can very easily get something wrong with catastrophic
consequences. I would highly recommend purchasing a dome from someone like Greg
or Emile. It will come with free advice worth more than the dome itself. Of all
the things one has to build for a sub, this is one of the areas with the most
specialized fabrication requirements. I
find viewport design is not a problem if you
get a copy of the PVHO, which should be considered mandatory
reading and is more or less a collection of recipes. But fabrication is
something else altogether, and to get to where the dome fabricators are has them
years of trial and error.
The contents of this
e-mail are intended for the named addressee only. It contains information that
may be confidential. Unless you are the named addressee or an authorized designee, you may not copy or use it, or
disclose it to anyone else. If you received it in error please notify us
immediately and then destroy it.
From: owner-
personal_submersibles@psubs.org [mailto:owner-
personal_submersibles@psubs.org ] On Behalf
Of André Eriksen
Sent: Friday, June 15, 2012 4:16
PM
To:
personal_submersibles@psubs.org
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST]
how to fit the acrylic dome
From
what you said I made this sketch (attached). Is this a good way to fasten
the dome?
It is not done to drill / tap any holes in a acrylic dome. Stressraiser!
For shallow divers you can glue .
Under high pressures the dome contracts more than the ring
I use a o-ring on the edge and stainless steel bands hold down the
dome.
Flange also possible for shallow divers. In the handbook of acrylics
are some examples.
I`m new to this forum, and are planning to build a 3 person
sub.
I can`t seem to find any plans or pictures on how to fit
the acrylic dome for the hatch. Is it screwed down on flanges with an
o-ring underneath, or liquid gasket/glue? I`ve seen
some domes without flanges, how do they attach
them?