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  • #16
    Re: Question about pressure gauge

    Originally posted by NY86 View Post
    Why don't you pay someone to test the tank?
    What would I do with it after I got it tested and it was OK? - Mike
    Mike Horowitz
    Falls Church, Va
    BC-12D, N5188M
    TF - 14954

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    • #17
      Re: Question about pressure gauge

      Uh, whatever you were going to do with it after you tested it yourself...???

      I've had SCUBA tanks hydro'd for about $25 each and their working pressure is around 3000 psi. Seems this tank of yours wouldn't cost more than that to test.
      John
      New Yoke hub covers
      www.skyportservices.net

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      • #18
        Re: Question about pressure gauge

        John... making sense has nothing to do with it! I do the same thing as Mike..if I can buy a tool for $10, alot of times I wind up making it, and it'll cost 5 times as much..hahaa
        When we put the door on my hangar, my neighbor (lives about 3 miles away) drove to town (about 25 miles) got in his plane, flew back out here, and helped put the door on.. then jumped in the plane and flew back to town, and drove back home. He was telling someone about it, and they said that it made no sense to them at all.... Monty's reply was, "well, you just don't understand airplanes!!" hahhaa
        JH
        I'm so far behind, I think I'm ahead

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        • #19
          Re: Question about pressure gauge

          Originally posted by N96337 View Post
          making sense has nothing to do with it!
          sorry...
          John
          New Yoke hub covers
          www.skyportservices.net

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          • #20
            Re: Question about pressure gauge

            Originally posted by N96337 View Post
            ..my neighbor (lives about 3 miles away) drove to town (about 25 miles) got in his plane, flew back out here,... then jumped in the plane and flew back to town, and drove back home.
            Probably a lot easier to get him through security that way...
            John
            New Yoke hub covers
            www.skyportservices.net

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            • #21
              Re: Question about pressure gauge

              To test a pressure wessel you need to know the pressure rating on it,
              not the burts pressure, just operating pressure!Operating pressure is stamped on the wessel!
              Burst Pressure is the maximum pressure the wessel will hold with out deformation or bursting! this is a Caclulated value and sometime tested in the factory. The operating pressure is only a portion of the burst pressure. A saftey factor of 3.5 to 6 are common depending of intended use.
              If you fill it with water and use a hand pump to get to 100 or so psi you be fine, you will see a leak.
              A leak test is easyer to do with low or max operation airpressur and a bottle with soap bubble solution. Use a common dish soap.
              If you want to know if it is safe? Yes water will not cause an explosive failure but if you dont trust it, By another one!
              The greasgun will take for ever and a day to pump up any pressure rent/borrow a pressure pump from a local plumbing shop, or bring the tank to them.
              PSI = pound per square inch and tank has many squae inches,= large force = be carefull I did see some sever failures caused be over pressure and bad manitinece in my days as pipefitter. One almost removed my face! It was tender for some days after the airblast it recived. TO CLOSE FOR COMFORT.
              No,a good gauge will work in both water and air but does it have the pressure rating. Expeted pressure + 50 %.
              Len
              Last edited by Len Petterson; 11-19-2006, 06:21. Reason: better text
              I loved airplane seens I was a kid.
              The T- craft # 1 aircraft for me.
              Foundation Member # 712

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              • #22
                Re: Question about pressure gauge

                Originally posted by Hank Jarrett View Post
                By the way, I don't have a CLUE what a water pipe will hold safely. I SURE AS HECK wouldn't hold the water pipe!
                Hank
                Schedule 40 PVC pipe is rated for 600psi and I plan on using it for air feed lines in our new hangar. Doesn't rust and easy to install.

                I think this tank testing is all sounding way more complicated than it needs to be. If you don't have confidence in the integrity of the tank, for what a compressor costs maybe it would make more sense just to buy a new one. In some cases a new one will cost less than repairing an old one. My two cents.

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                • #23
                  Re: Question about pressure gauge

                  "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did.

                  DO the Tank
                  B 52 Norm
                  1946 BC12-D1 Nc 44496
                  Quicksilver AMPIB, N4NH
                  AOPA 11996 EAA 32643
                  NRA4734945
                  Lake Thunderbird , Cherokee Village
                  Somewhere on the 38° parallel in NE Arkansas

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