[PSUBS-MAILIST] actuated valves?

Sean T. Stevenson via Personal_Submersibles personal_submersibles at psubs.org
Sat Apr 15 12:12:59 EDT 2017


I would look at air actuated valves, so that you avoid subjecting any electronics to submergence, and then if you want automation, use 24 VDC solenoids inside the pressure hull to switch the air signals, along with a manual bypass on each pilot line for SHTF control.

Sean


On April 15, 2017 8:38:12 AM MDT, hank pronk via Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
>Alec,If you want simple, look at electric solenoid valves for venting
>the tanks.  You can buy 8 valves for 100 dollars.  You can plumb the
>tanks together to create 4 zones or you can install one valve directly
>to each tank (12)   The beauty of using more valves is safety.  If one
>fails, no big issue.  You can wire 3 valves together so only need a 5
>wire penetrator.  The nice thing about this idea is it is cheap to
>experiment with and no modification to the tanks or sub.  you will need
>check valves on the air feed lines so the tanks are not connected.  No
>point in venting one zone if it can send or receive air to another
>zone.  If you are reluctant to use unprotected valves in fresh water, I
>can say the ones we used on our log salvage ROV never once gave us a
>problem in two years of operation.  I am talking many thousands of
>dives, actually one dive every 7 minutes.  If your in salt water then
>you may want to go with an electric valve bank with four valves where
>the valve bank is in an oil tank with a bladder mounted behind the CT.
>  That is how my hydraulic valve works for my new manipulator.  It is
>fast and easy to set up, and is what I will do for Elementary.  In the
>mean time you can use cheap valves to figure it all out.  Your entire
>fix (experiment) can be under 200 dollars, then go to oil bath
>solenoids.Hank 
>
>On Saturday, April 15, 2017 6:12 AM, Alec Smyth via
>Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
> 
>
> Hi all,
>I'm mulling over options for re-plumbing Shackleton's MBTs. I can go
>with re-positioned tubing or remotely actuated valves. In principle the
>tubing is easier, but I'm trying to think through all possibilities
>before deciding, and just thought of a new option. There's six tanks
>per side, and the tanks are small so it would be a challenge to put a
>mushroom valve inside each tank. Besides, that would be a dozen valves.
>However, I could also do just two valves per side, mounted outside and
>above the tanks, with very short hoses or tubes leading from three
>tanks to each valve. There is space, and because the valves would be
>outside the tanks I have a lot more freedom for the size or geometry of
>the valves. Maybe even normal ball valves actuated by a little air
>cylinder. This system would allow for fore-aft and side-to-side
>control, and would be highly resistant to list-induced water blocking. 
>Anyone have thoughts on the KISSest way to control valves? For example,
>something that could work with unregulated 3K psi air?
>
>Thanks,
>Alec
>
>_______________________________________________
>Personal_Submersibles mailing list
>Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
>http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
>
>
>   
>
>------------------------------------------------------------------------
>
>_______________________________________________
>Personal_Submersibles mailing list
>Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
>http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
-------------- next part --------------
An HTML attachment was scrubbed...
URL: <http://www.whoweb.com/pipermail/personal_submersibles/attachments/20170415/6dd76e2a/attachment.html>


More information about the Personal_Submersibles mailing list